Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The Preference for Intuition and Deliberation in Food Decision-Making Scale (E-PID) was developed to evaluate both intuitive and deliberative food decision-making within a single instrument. However, its psychometric properties have only been assessed among German-speaking participants. The main aim of the present study was to evaluate evidence of validity and reliability of the E-PID among 604 Brazilian adult women. Exploratory ( = 289) and confirmatory factor analyses ( = 315) were conducted to evaluate the factor structure of the E-PID. Convergent validity was assessed correlating the E-PID with measures of eating behaviors (Tree-Factor Eating Questionnaire-18), intuitive eating (Intuitive Eating Scale-2), and a measure of beliefs and attitudes towards food (Food-Life Questionnaire-SF). McDonald's Omega coefficient (ω) was used to test the internal consistency of the E-PID. Results from an exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis supported a two-factor structure with seven items. We found good internal consistency (McDonald's = 0.77-0.81). Furthermore, the E-PID demonstrated adequate convergent validity with measures of intuitive, restrictive, emotional and uncontrolled eating, and beliefs and attitudes towards food. Results support the use of the E-PID as a measure of intuition and deliberation in food decision-making among Brazilian adult women, expanding the literature on eating decision-making styles.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11478558PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu16193252DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

intuition deliberation
12
brazilian adult
12
adult women
12
food decision-making
12
psychometric properties
8
preference intuition
8
eating decision-making
8
decision-making scale
8
deliberation food
8
confirmatory factor
8

Similar Publications

Background: With the advancement of MR-based imaging, prostate cancer ablative therapies have seen increased interest to reduce complications of prostate cancer treatment. Although less invasive, they do carry procedural risks, including rectal injury. To date, the medicolegal aspects of ablative therapy remain underexplored.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Dual Process Theory of Autism proposes that those high in autistic traits, including autistic individuals, have both a reduced propensity for intuition and an enhanced propensity for deliberation. Whilst intuition is rapid and autonomous, many factors impact upon deliberation, and an intolerance of uncertainty may mediate the relationship between autistic traits and propensity for deliberation (but not intuition). Two studies were conducted to explore this hypothesis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exploring social influences on healthcare user decision-making.

Soc Sci Med

August 2025

Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Erasmus Choice Modelling Centre, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Erasmus Centre for Health Economics Rotterdam, Erasmus University, the Netherlands.

Commonly used choice models in healthcare assume that decision-making is an individualistic process, while other individuals or groups (i.e., influencers) can in fact impact decision-making.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

When multiple ways of deciding are laid out side-by-side, which does one favour? We conducted experiments in 12 countries ( = 3517 individuals; 13 languages; two Indigenous communities), with adults choosing among four decision strategies-personal intuition, private deliberation, friends' advice or crowd wisdom-when working through six everyday dilemmas. In every society, self-reliant decisions (intuition or deliberation) were most commonly preferred and considered the wisest. Expectations for fellow citizens, however, were mixed: advice from friends was expected about as often as self-reliant routes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Spontaneous mentalizing refers to the capacity to attribute mental states to oneself and others without explicit prompts or conscious deliberation. This process enables individuals to comprehend and anticipate social behaviors in a more intuitive manner. Individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia frequently demonstrate deficits in this domain, which contribute to impaired social functioning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF