NCT04912375

Brief Summary

Background: Experimental and cross-sectional evidence suggests that poor executive function can lead to heightened reactivity to food cues and perceived greater reward of unhealthy but palatable foods and subsequently lead to overeating or clinical eating disorders. This may be an important reason for the increasing trend of obesity in our society. Aims: This study will investigate the interrelationships among executive function, reactivity to food-related cues and eating style in young adults. In addition, this study will examine the influence of food environment and stress on reactivity to food-related cues and executive function and how executive function and reactivity to food-related cues would influence health risky behaviours in young adults. We will also conduct a pilot randomized control trial (RCT) to develop the culturally specific goal priming intervention for the Chinese adults and test its effect on decision-making for food choice among adults with low executive function. Design and subjects: This will be a three-wave cohort study in young adults who are recruited in their final-year of first post-secondary education and follow-up at six months and 12 months after their graduation. For the pilot RCT, a 2 (low vs. high executive function) x 2 (with vs. without goal priming intervention) will be used to test the effect of goal priming intervention on food choice. The goal priming intervention will be 5-min word-searching task to prime goals of healthy eating. Main outcome measures: Participants will be invited to complete a series on computerized tasks and other assessments online in each wave to assess their executive function, risk taking propensity, reactivity to food-related cues, perceived stress, exposure to food-related cues, eating style and other health-related behaviours. Structural equation modelling will be used to test the interrelationships among executive function, reactivity to food-related cues and eating style, among exposure to food-related cues, perceived stress and reactivity to food-related cues, and among executive function, reactivity to food-related cues, risk taking and adoption of health-related behaviours. For the pilot RCT, the effect of intervention on tendency of choosing healthy and low-calorie foods will be evaluated using logistic regression model with level of executive function and goal-priming intervention as the main between-group factors.

Trial Health

87
On Track

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
126

participants targeted

Target at P50-P75 for not_applicable

Timeline
Completed

Started Jun 2021

Longer than P75 for not_applicable

Geographic Reach
1 country

1 active site

Status
completed

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

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Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

May 27, 2021

Completed
7 days until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

June 3, 2021

Completed
21 days until next milestone

Study Start

First participant enrolled

June 24, 2021

Completed
3.3 years until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

October 24, 2024

Completed
2 months until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

December 24, 2024

Completed
Last Updated

March 30, 2025

Status Verified

March 1, 2025

Enrollment Period

3.3 years

First QC Date

May 27, 2021

Last Update Submit

March 25, 2025

Conditions

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (1)

  • The effect of goal priming intervention on food choice

    The name of measure: participants' tendency to choose different categories of foods Measurement tool: the force food choice task * The force food choice task evaluates participants' 'wanting' of foods with tempting cues. ("if you had to make a choice, which food would you most want to eat now?") * Software: Survey responses and test data were recorded in Inquisit via the web or lab-based service. Unit of measure: the frequency of food selections

    Immediately after participants completing the tasks

Study Arms (4)

Low EF with priming

EXPERIMENTAL

Participants will be first stratified by their Executive function (EF). In this arm, participants have low EF. They will play a puzzle task that will ask participants to take 5 min to search Chinese words for meaningful statements. Each statement represents an implicit goal of healthy eating.

Behavioral: Priming intervention

Low EF without priming

NO INTERVENTION

Participants will be first stratified by their Executive function (EF). In this arm, participants have low EF. They will play a similar puzzle task but the statements they searched are neutral.

High EF with priming

EXPERIMENTAL

Participants will be first stratified by their Executive function (EF). In this arm, participants have high EF. They will play a puzzle task that will ask participants to take 5 min to search Chinese words for meaningful statements. Each statement represents an implicit goal of healthy eating.

Behavioral: Priming intervention

High EF without priming

NO INTERVENTION

Participants will be first stratified by their Executive function (EF). In this arm, participants have high EF. They will play a similar puzzle task but the statements they searched are neutral.

Interventions

The pilot RCT will ask participants to complete a simple word-searching exercise as a goal-priming of healthy eating and can be completed in 5 min.

High EF with primingLow EF with priming

Eligibility Criteria

Age18 Years - 30 Years
Sexall
Healthy VolunteersNo
Age GroupsAdult (18-64)

You may qualify if:

  • Healthy adults who can speak Chinese or Mandarin
  • Aged between 18 and 30 years

You may not qualify if:

  • Having cognitive difficulties to understand the study instruments
  • Having a physical or medical condition that requires certain food or dietary restrictions
  • Having been diagnosed with any pathogenic eating disorders
  • Participants whose subject is related to psychology

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Study Sites (1)

University of Hong Kong School of Public Health

Hong Kong, China

Location

MeSH Terms

Conditions

Food Preferences

Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)

Feeding BehaviorBehavior

Study Officials

  • Qiuyan Liao, PhD

    School of Public Health, University of Hong Kong

    PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
not applicable
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
SINGLE
Who Masked
OUTCOMES ASSESSOR
Purpose
PREVENTION
Intervention Model
PARALLEL
Sponsor Type
OTHER
Responsible Party
PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
PI Title
Assistant Professor

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

May 27, 2021

First Posted

June 3, 2021

Study Start

June 24, 2021

Primary Completion

October 24, 2024

Study Completion

December 24, 2024

Last Updated

March 30, 2025

Record last verified: 2025-03

Locations