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Jacqueline Blissett

Jacqueline Blissett

D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
45
Citations
7925
World Ranking
6715
National Ranking
676

Overview

Jacqueline Blissett is affiliated with Aston University in the United Kingdom and conducts research primarily within the fields of Medicine and Psychology. Their work spans several subfields including Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Clinical Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental Health, Nutrition and Dietetics, and Epidemiology.

Their research focuses extensively on topics related to obesity, physical activity, and diet, as well as child nutrition and feeding issues. Eating disorders and behaviors also constitute a significant portion of their scholarly activity. Other areas of interest include breastfeeding practices and influences, consumer attitudes and food labeling, infant health and development, and child nutrition and access to water.

Blissett has contributed to multiple recent publications. Among these are:

  • Caregiver Influences on Eating Behaviors in Young Children, 2020, Journal of the American Heart Association
  • The relationship between sensory sensitivity, food fussiness and food preferences in children with neurodevelopmental disorders, 2020, Appetite
  • Influences on the dietary intakes of preschool children: a systematic scoping review, 2022, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
  • Flavor Sensing in Utero and Emerging Discriminative Behaviors in the Human Fetus, 2022, Psychological Science
  • Reciprocal associations between parental feeding practices and child eating behaviours from toddlerhood to early childhood: bivariate latent change analysis in the Gemini cohort, 2023, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry

The scientist regularly publishes in venues such as Appetite, where they have 42 publications, as well as the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity and Maternal and Child Nutrition, each with 5 publications. They also have contributions in the Journal of the American Heart Association and Psychological Science.

Frequent collaborators include Katie Edwards, Emma Haycraft, Claire Farrow, Abigail Pickard, and Moritz Herle. This network consists of researchers with whom Blissett has worked over multiple publications, reflecting ongoing collaborative research efforts.

Best Publications

  • Relationships between parenting style, feeding style and feeding practices and fruit and vegetable consumption in early childhood.

    Jacqueline Blissett

  • Eating disorders and quality of life: a review of the literature.

    Paul E. Jenkins;Renee Rienecke Hoste;Caroline Meyer;Jacqueline M. Blissett

  • Inducing preschool children's emotional eating: relations with parental feeding practices

    Jacqueline Blissett;Emma Haycraft;Claire V. Farrow

  • Maternal and paternal controlling feeding practices with male and female children

    Jacqueline Blissett;Caroline Meyer;Emma Haycraft

  • Is cognitive behavior therapy developmentally appropriate for young children? A critical review of the evidence.

    J Grave;J Blissett

  • Controlling feeding practices: cause or consequence of early child weight?

    Claire Victoria Farrow;Jacqueline Blissett

  • Are parenting style and controlling feeding practices related

    Jacqueline Blissett;Emma Haycraft

  • Fruit and vegetable consumption in children and their mothers. Moderating effects of child sensory sensitivity.

    Helen Coulthard;Jacqueline Blissett

  • Maternal and Paternal Controlling Feeding Practices: Reliability and Relationships With BMI

    Emma L. Haycraft;Jacqueline M. Blissett

  • Sexual orientation and eating psychopathology: the role of masculinity and femininity.

    Caroline Meyer;Jacqueline Blissett;Claire Oldfield

  • Tube feeding in infancy: implications for the development of normal eating and drinking skills.

    Sarah J. Mason;Sarah J. Mason;Gillian Harris;Gillian Harris;Jacqueline Blissett

  • Relationships between temperament and eating behaviours in young children

    Emma Haycraft;Claire V. Farrow;Caroline Meyer;Faye Powell

  • Teaching our children when to eat: how parental feeding practices inform the development of emotional eating—a longitudinal experimental design

    Claire V. Farrow;Emma Haycraft;Jacqueline Blissett

  • Social influences on eating: implications for nutritional interventions.

    Eric Robinson;Jackie Blissett;Suzanne Higgs

  • Intrinsic and extrinsic influences on children's acceptance of new foods

    Jackie Blissett;Anna Fogel

  • Predictors of paternal and maternal controlling feeding practices with 2- to 5-year-old children.

    Emma Haycraft;Jacqueline Blissett

  • Predictors of maternal control of feeding at 1 and 2 years of age

    Jackie Blissett;Claire Farrow

  • Caregiver Influences on Eating Behaviors in Young Children: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association.

    Alexis C. Wood;Jacqueline M. Blissett;Jeffrey M. Brunstrom;Susan Carnell

  • Maternal cognitions, psychopathologic symptoms, and infant temperament as predictors of early infant feeding problems: a longitudinal study

    Claire Farrow;Jacqueline Blissett

  • Is Maternal Psychopathology Related to Obesigenic Feeding Practices at 1 Year

    Claire V. Farrow;Jacqueline M. Blissett

  • Teaching our children when to eat: how parental feeding practices inform the development of emotional eating—a longitudinal

    Claire V Farrow;Emma Haycraft;Jackie M Blissett

Frequent Co-Authors

Claire V. Farrow
Claire V. Farrow Aston University
Emma Haycraft
Emma Haycraft Loughborough University
Caroline Meyer
Caroline Meyer University of Warwick
Suzanne Higgs
Suzanne Higgs University of Birmingham
Louise E. Jackson
Louise E. Jackson University of California, Davis
Eric Robinson
Eric Robinson University of Liverpool
Arie Nouwen
Arie Nouwen Middlesex University
Jeffrey M. Brunstrom
Jeffrey M. Brunstrom University of Bristol
Panos Vostanis
Panos Vostanis University of Leicester
Alison L. Miller
Alison L. Miller University of Michigan–Ann Arbor

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