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Database Profile

F4H Image Collection

General information

URL: http://nutritionalneuroscience.eu/index.php/11-resources/32-f4h-image-collection
Full name:
Description: An easy-to-use photographing protocol enables researchers to generate high resolution food images appropriate for their study objective and population. In addition, it provides a high quality standardized picture set which was characterized in seven European countries. With the use of this photographing protocol a large number of food images were created. Of these images, 80 were selected based on their recognizability in Scotland, Greece and The Netherlands. Image characteristics such as liking, perceived calories and/or perceived healthiness ratings from 449 adults and 191 children were collected. The majority of the foods were recognized and liked at all sites.
Year founded: 2016
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: Netherlands

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
NA
Database category:
Major species:
NA
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University Medical Center Utrecht
Address: Image Sciences Institute, University Medical Center Utrecht, Heidelberglaan 100, 3584 CX Utrecht, The Netherlands
City: Utrecht
Province/State:
Country/Region: Netherlands
Contact name (PI/Team): Lisette Charbonnier
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): lisette@isi.uu.nl

Publications

26344127
Standardized food images: A photographing protocol and image database. [PMID: 26344127]
Charbonnier L, van Meer F, van der Laan LN, Viergever MA, Smeets PAM.

The regulation of food intake has gained much research interest because of the current obesity epidemic. For research purposes, food images are a good and convenient alternative for real food because many dietary decisions are made based on the sight of foods. Food pictures are assumed to elicit anticipatory responses similar to real foods because of learned associations between visual food characteristics and post-ingestive consequences. In contemporary food science, a wide variety of images are used which introduces between-study variability and hampers comparison and meta-analysis of results. Therefore, we created an easy-to-use photographing protocol which enables researchers to generate high resolution food images appropriate for their study objective and population. In addition, we provide a high quality standardized picture set which was characterized in seven European countries. With the use of this photographing protocol a large number of food images were created. Of these images, 80 were selected based on their recognizability in Scotland, Greece and The Netherlands. We collected image characteristics such as liking, perceived calories and/or perceived healthiness ratings from 449 adults and 191 children. The majority of the foods were recognized and liked at all sites. The differences in liking ratings, perceived calories and perceived healthiness between sites were minimal. Furthermore, perceived caloric content and healthiness ratings correlated strongly (r ? 0.8) with actual caloric content in both adults and children. The photographing protocol as well as the images and the data are freely available for research use on http://nutritionalneuroscience.eu/. By providing the research community with standardized images and the tools to create their own, comparability between studies will be improved and a head-start is made for a world-wide standardized food image database.

Appetite. 2016:96() | 96 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
1428/6895 (79.304%)
Raw bio-data:
98/582 (83.333%)
1428
Total Rank
87
Citations
9.667
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Farah Nazir [2018-04-17]