2025 Symposium Keynote Speakers

FIFTH ANNUAL OBESITY RESEARCH INITATIVE SYMPOSIUM

FEBRUARY 11, 2025

ITINERARY and KEYNOTE SPEAKER

 

ORI Symposium Itinerary

ITINERARY
8:45-9:00 Check in and Welcome
9:00-10:00 Student Poster Presentations
10:00-10:15 Coffee/water break
10:15-10:20 Symposium Speaker Introduction, Dr. Jamie Cooper
10:20-11:00 Keynote Speaker, Dr. Chen Zhen Using Scanner Data to Inform Food and Nutrition Policymaking.
11:00-11:15 Georgia Albino, Student presenter Obesity, not age, drives increased cardiovascular strain during passive heat stress in middle- aged compared with young women.
11:15-11:30 Prince Kwabena Osei, Student presenter Assessing Energy and Nutrient Intakes with Automatic Ingestion Monitor (AIM-2) in Rural and Urban Ghanaian Adolescents.
11:30-11:45 Tianli Wang, Student presenter The Interactive Effect of Prenatal Vitamin D Status and Maternal Obesity on Birth Outcomes among US Black Women.
11:45-12:00 Award Presentations and Final Remarks

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Chen Zhen, PhD, GA Athletic Association Professor in Food Choice, Obesity & Health, Department of Agriculture and Applied Economics

We are thrilled to have UGA’s own Dr. Chen Zhen as our keynote speaker this year.

Dr Zhen is leading a study recently funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture. In partnership with international colleagues, Zhen will observe and compare the influence of nutrition labeling systems used in the U.S. and the European Union (EU) to inform future policy decisions in those countries.

The four-year, $794,000 award will help the researchers better understand how the use of supplementary nutrition information on packaged food labels, particularly front-of-package (FOP) labels, have unintended consequences across the socioeconomic spectrum.

Dr. Zhen’s  work centers on the economics of nutrition and healthy eating. “There’s been a long-standing interest in the causal effect of providing additional information on food labels to consumers, particularly interpretive labeling that communicates more than just numeric facts.”