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Featured Article: Sensory processing and child appetitive traits: findings from the ROLO longitudinal birth cohort study

New Content ItemOral sensory hypersensitivity has been linked with fussy eating predominantly in non-typically developing children. In this study, the authors describe the sensory profiles of a cohort of healthy mother-child pairs and explore the relationship between child ‘Oral’ sensory processing and child appetitive traits at 9–11 years old in typically developing children. Additionally, they explore associations between child ‘Social-Emotional’ responses associated with sensory processing and child appetitive traits as well as relationships between maternal and child sensory profile quadrants as per the Dunn’s Sensory Processing Framework.

Aims and scope

Nutrition Journal publishes novel surveillance, epidemiologic, and intervention research that sheds light on i) influences (e.g., familial, environmental) on eating patterns; ii) associations between eating patterns and health, and iii) strategies to improve eating patterns among populations. The journal also welcomes manuscripts reporting on the psychometric properties (e.g., validity, reliability) and feasibility of methods (e.g., for assessing dietary intake) for human nutrition research. In addition, study protocols for controlled trials and cohort studies, with an emphasis on methods for assessing dietary exposures and outcomes as well as intervention components, will be considered. The journal does not consider animal studies.

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Meet the Co-Editors-in-Chief

Rikard Landberg, PhD, Co-Editor-in-Chief


Professor Rikard Landberg is the head of Division of Food and Nutrition Science at ChalmersNew Content Item University of Technology, Sweden (n=50) and visiting professor at the Wallenberg laboratory, Department of Molecular and Clinical Medicine, Institute of Medicine at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg.  

The multidisciplinary group of Landberg studies the preventive role of (plant-based) foods and dietary patterns using observational- and intervention studies. Landberg is the PI of several RCTs on the role of plant- based foods in appetite and body weight regulation and on cardiometabolic disease risk. He has also studied the impact of such foods and components on gut health and IBS. So far, the team has conducted about 15 trails including more than 1500 participants: from small acute studies to investigate fundamental mechanisms of specific dietary components on human physiology to large scale long-term randomized controlled trials to substantiate EU health claims. Landberg also leads studies to test novel OMICs-based personalized concepts for improved CVD prevention. Metabolomics is a key technique used for discovery and validation of exposure- and prediction biomarkers, and for molecular phenotyping as the basis for tailored dietary strategies for personalized nutrition. Novel food intake biomarkers for whole grain intake, fish, coffee and dietary patterns have emerged and been validated and implemented widely by the international research community. The Landberg group uses well established cohorts from Sweden (SIMPLER, Northern Disease and Health Study), Denmark (Danish Diet Cancer and Health – Next Generation cohort) and from Europe (European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition). Professor Landberg has authored ~220 papers, ~10 book chapters, delivered ~30 invited/keynote lectures and is the editor of one book. He has an H-index of 45 according to Scopus. Professor Landberg is a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Science and of the National Committee for Nutrition and Food Science at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
 

Qi Sun, MD, Sc.D., Co-Editor-in-Chief

Associate Professor of Medicine in Channing Division of Network Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical SchoolNew Content Item

Dr. Qi Sun is Associate Professor of Medicine in Channing Division of Network Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. He is also Associate Professor in the Departments of Nutrition and Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Dr. Sun’s primary research interests include identifying and examining biomedical risk factors, particularly dietary biomarkers, in relation to type 2 diabetes, obesity, and cardiovascular disease through epidemiological investigations. His research is primarily based on several large-scale cohort studies including the Nurses’ Health Studies and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. Dr. Sun is also interested in understanding the role of environmental pollutants, such as perfluoroalkyl substances and legacy persistent organic pollutants, in the etiology of weight change and type 2 diabetes. In the era of precision nutrition, Dr. Sun develops a new research interest of understanding the role of microbiome in mediating and modulating diet-health associations. Dr. Sun is currently leading a few NIH-funded projects that focus on food biomarker discovery and validation, diet-microbiome-health inter-relationships, as well as associations between obesogens and weight change in human populations.

Annual Journal Metrics

  • Citation Impact 2023
    Journal Impact Factor: 4.4
    5-year Journal Impact Factor: 4.6
    Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP): 1.551
    SCImago Journal Rank (SJR): 1.288

    Speed 2024
    Submission to first editorial decision (median days): 12
    Submission to acceptance (median days): 160

    Usage 2024
    Downloads: 2,523,778
    Altmetric mentions: 3,621