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1 king and walking for transportation and less television viewing).
2 sports participation and daily time spent in television viewing.
3 evoked naturalistically, during educational television viewing.
4 , differential non-response and stability of television viewing.
5 e amounts and types of foods consumed during television viewing.
6 more; 34 percent restricted their children's television viewing.
7 someone injured or killed, and bomb-related television viewing.
8 groups following trajectories of higher use: television viewing, 128 (10.4%); video gaming, 145 (11.8
10 al studies have found an association between television viewing and child and adolescent adiposity.
12 ost 2 times higher for adults with both high television viewing and low physical activity in 107 of 3
14 significant decreases in children's reported television viewing and meals eaten in front of the telev
17 een overstimulation in infancy via excessive television viewing and subsequent deficits in cognition
18 ated with both attentional difficulties (for television viewing) and benefits (in action video gamers
19 e of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, television viewing, and body mass index (BMI; weight (kg
20 fitness, self-reported sports participation, television viewing, and regular play were collected for
21 ls, less frequent fast food and meals during television viewing, and shorter durations of television
22 ren's daily energy intake is consumed during television viewing, and the consumption of high-fat food
23 t higher amounts of overall sitting time and television viewing are positively associated with mortal
24 ariable-adjusted logistic regression models, television viewing at least 4 hours/day versus no televi
28 the fat content of the foods consumed during television viewing did not differ significantly from tha
31 dinally, children with reported increases in television viewing duration over time (from <1.5 to >/=
34 with low television viewing, those with high television viewing during 25 years (353 of 3247 [10.9%])
35 lts provide preliminary data to suggest that television viewing for more than 3.5 hours per day is re
36 television viewing, and shorter durations of television viewing, gaming, and online social networking
37 o-vigorous physical activity </=1 hour/week, television viewing >/=3 hours/day, and BMI >/=25) had si
39 gh levels of MVPA (>7 h/wk), high amounts of television viewing (>/=7 h/d) remained associated with i
42 duration and media use (ie, computer use and television viewing) have important implications for the
43 television in 2010 using a Nielsen panel of television-viewing households of Hispanic and non-Hispan
48 ass index, physical activity >/= 2.5 h/week, television viewing </= 7 h/week, diet in the top 40% of
51 tigated the associations between reading and television viewing on brain morphology and neurocognitiv
53 mily functioning for each additional hour of television viewing or e-game/computer use depending on t
55 to examine the independent relationships of television viewing or other screen-based entertainment (
58 al analysis, children with longer periods of television viewing reported at baseline (>/= 1.5 hours p
62 lowing information was collected: daughter's television viewing time and physical activity (PA) level
63 udies have addressed the association between television viewing time in childhood and overweight/obes
66 evision viewing time/low PA level versus low television viewing time/high PA level at ages 3-5 years
68 obesity, education, poor self-rated health, television-viewing time, and having a sedentary occupati
69 -language television by product category and television-viewing times by age and language preference.
72 Participants reported their weekly amount of television viewing, video gaming, computer use, and read