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Carmel Bennett

Researcher at Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust

Publications -  13
Citations -  302

Carmel Bennett is an academic researcher from Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust. The author has contributed to research in topics: Impulsivity & Contingency management. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications receiving 235 citations. Previous affiliations of Carmel Bennett include University of Birmingham.

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Cultural differences in parental feeding practices and children’s eating behaviours and their relationships with child BMI: a comparison of Black Afro-Caribbean, White British and White German samples

TL;DR: Both similarities and differences in feeding practices and eating behaviours and their relationships with child weight in different cultural groups in Europe are found, highlighting the importance of being aware of cultural differences when carrying out research with multi-cultural samples in Europe.
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Measuring hunger and satiety in primary school children. Validation of a new picture rating scale

TL;DR: Three studies aimed to validate the use of a new categorical rating scale in the context of estimated and real eating episodes and indicated that the scale has potential for use with primary school children.
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Parental modelling and prompting effects on acceptance of a novel fruit in 2-4-year-old children are dependent on children's food responsiveness.

TL;DR: Modelling consumption best promotes acceptance in children with low food responsiveness, and physical prompting in the absence of modelling is likely to be detrimental to NF acceptance.
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Predicting Successful Introduction of Novel Fruit to Preschool Children

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated which feeding strategies parents commonly use when introducing a novel fruit to their preschool-aged children and assessed the effectiveness of these feeding strategies on children's willingness to try a new fruit, finding that the frequency with which children swallowed and enjoyed the novel fruit, and the frequency of taste exposures to the new fruit during the meal, were positively correlated with parental use of physical prompting and rewarding/bargaining.