Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Sep 28.
Published in final edited form as: Appetite. 2015 Mar 5;90:219–228. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2015.03.001

Table 1.

Demographics of samples In Study 1

Full sample
N = 451
Jury pool
N = 263
Online
N = 187
Gender Female 62.5%
N = 282
62.7%
N = 165
62.6%
N = 117
Male 32.2%
N = 145
30.8%
N = 81
34.2%
N = 64
Missing data 5.3%
N = 24
6.5%
N = 17
3.2%
N = 6
Age M = 36.56
SD = 13.77
N = 434
M = 41.88
SD = 12.87
N = 250
M = 29.32
SD = 11.48
N = 184
Race/ethnicity White 54.3%
N = 245
42.2%
N = 111
71.7%
N = 134
African- American 19.7%
N = 89
31.2%
N = 82
3.7%
N = 7
Missing/Other 26%
N = 117
26.7%
N = 70
24.5%
N = 46
Education Some high school 2.4%
N = 11
4.2%
N = 11
N = 0
High school graduate/GED 19.7%
N = 89
30.4%
N = 80
4.8%
N = 9
Some college 29.0%
N = 131
26.2%
N = 69
33.2%
N = 62
College degree 13.3%
N = 60
11.8%
N = 31
15.5%
N = 29
Some post-baccalaureate study 11.1%
N = 50
7.6%
N = 20
16.0%
N = 30
Graduate/professional degree 19.7%
N = 89
13.7%
N = 36
28.3%
N = 53
Missing data 4.7%
N = 21
6.1%
N = 16
2.1%
N = 4
Socioeconomic Status Lower middle and lower class 17.0%
N = 77
19.0%
N = 50
14.4%
N = 27
Middle class 46.6%
N = 210
51.0%
N = 134
40.6%
N = 76
Upper middle and upper class 22.8%
N = 103
14.1%
N = 37
35.3%
N = 62
Missing data 13.5%
N = 61
16.0%
N = 42
9.6%
N = 18