Young children often display similar eating behavior as their parents, with a parent's own eating style influencing how they feed their children, research at Aston University has shown. The work suggests that parents can help to shape healthy eating behavior in their children both by how they themselves eat, as well as how they feed their children. A team led by Professor Jacqueline Blissett in the School of Psychology and Aston Institute of Health and Neurodevelopment (IHN) at Aston University, asked parents to assess their own eating behavior and looked for associations between those behaviors and those of their children.

The team grouped parents into four eating styles - 'typical eating', 'avid eating', 'emotional eating' and 'avoidant eating'. Typical eaters, who made up 41.4% of the sample, have no extreme behaviors.

Avid eaters (37.3%) have high food approach traits such as eating in response to food cues in the environment and their emotions, rather than hunger signals. Emotional eaters (15.

7%) also eat in response to emotion but do not enjoy food as much as avid eaters. Avoidant eaters (5.6%) are extremely selective about food and have a low enjoyment of eating.

The direct links between child and parent behavior were particularly clear in parents with avid or avoidant eating behaviors, whose children tended to have similar eating behavior. Parents who had avid or emotional eating styles were more likely to use food to soothe or comfort a child, who then in turn displa.