Comment by Angela Annis

Coauthor of a 2026 study on clock gene variation and dietary intake.
Personalized prevention strategies that consider genetic predispositions can enhance existing strategies. Research suggests that variation in circadian rhythm-related genes, or clock genes, may influence obesity risk, in part through effects on dietary behaviour.
Disputed (Jun 12, 2026)
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Disputed The quoted passage appears verbatim in the abstract of the official MDPI article "Clock Gene Variants Are Associated with Energy and Macronutrient Intake in Early Childhood and Adulthood," published on 2026-06-12. Independent records tied to PMID 42356293 list Angela Annis only as one of ten coauthors, not as the sole speaker/author of that wording. Because this is a multi-author journal article, this platform cannot verify it as a single-author quote by Angela Annis alone. The submitted PubMed URL itself was not directly fetchable here because it returned a reCAPTCHA page. ([mdpi.com](https://www.mdpi.com/journal/nutrients?s=Reduced+Educational+Outcomes+Persist+into+Adolescence+Following+Mild+Iodine+Deficiency+in+Utero%2C+Despite+Adequacy+in+Childhood&utm_source=openai)) · YouCongress gpt-5.4-2026-03-05 · 1h ago
replying to Angela Annis