Exploratory validation of the Fruit and Vegetable Neophobia Instrument among third- to fifth-grade students.

Appetite

UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1700 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, CB 7426, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States.

Published: January 2013

Children's unwillingness to try new foods, or food neophobia, may impact dietary behaviors. As part of an effort to evaluate Farm to School programs, the Fruit and Vegetable Neophobia Instrument (FVNI) was developed to measure student attitudes toward new fruits and vegetables. A self-administered, paper/pencil, 18-item questionnaire, the FVNI was adapted from the Food Neophobia Scale. The FVNI has two subscales: a fruit subscale that asks about a child's willingness to try new fruits in different circumstances and an analogous vegetable subscale. The FVNI was administered to 1485 third-through fifth-grade students (ages 8-10 years) from nine schools in two states at the start of the 2009-2010 school year. Data analysis used factor analyses, reliabilities, and LISREL structural equation models. The FVNI exhibited a two-factor structure and strong measures of model fit (χ(2)/df=5.36; Goodness of Fit=0.92; Adjusted Goodness of Fit=0.89; Non-Normed Fit Index=0.97; RMSEA=0.07; and RMSR=0.052). In this exploratory analysis, the FVNI proved to be internally consistent in assessing third-through fifth-grade students' fruit and vegetable neophobia.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2012.09.030DOI Listing

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