Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Faculty of Economics and Management, Universitaetsplatz 1, 39031 Bruneck, Italy; Asociació Llapis i llavors, Calle Aragó 565, bajos, Barcelona, Spain.
Free University of Bozen-Bolzano, Faculty of Economics and Management, Universitaetsplatz 1, 39031 Bruneck, Italy.
Food Res Int. 2019 Jan;115:83-89. doi: 10.1016/j.foodres.2018.07.027. Epub 2018 Jul 27.
Interest in commercializing insect-based foods is growing steadily. Nevertheless, most Western consumers still consider insects a food taboo. In this study, we investigated how persuasion strategies based on technology and social communication can intervene to reduce aversion towards the practice of eating a tropical insect from the Ecuadorian Amazon. We used a research design based on ethnoentomological information to place the insect-based food in its cultural context. The study is based on an online survey of 125 students from an international university based in a cross-border region of the Italian Alps. We used a covariance-based structural equation model to test the influence of the 6-item version of the Food Neophobia Scale and of the aforementioned persuasion strategies on stated willingness to consume insects. Results show that food neophobia negatively affects persuasion strategies but that the latter do have a positive influence on stated consumption intention. Additionally, the model shows that the negative effect of Food Neophobia Scale on the willingness to consume insects is fully mediated by persuasion strategies. Our findings are in line with previous studies which indicate that peers' recommendations on the safety and palatability of edible insects, as well as the practice of disguising them in familiar food, increase the stated willingness to consume them. Moreover, the importance of the commercial context where the insects are sold is a driver of entomophagous practices. Finally, our study suggests that the introduction of contextual cultural information about insects as a food source may help to preclude a priori false assumptions regarding entomophagy. This is also one of the aims of Regulation (EU) 2015/2283 on insects as novel food which recently came into force. We discuss the implications of the findings for both scholars and practitioners.
人们对昆虫类食品的商业化兴趣日益浓厚。然而,大多数西方消费者仍然认为昆虫是一种禁忌食物。在这项研究中,我们研究了基于技术和社会交流的说服策略如何进行干预,以减少对厄瓜多尔亚马逊地区热带昆虫食用实践的厌恶。我们使用了一种基于民族昆虫学信息的研究设计,将昆虫类食品置于其文化背景下。该研究基于对一所位于意大利阿尔卑斯山跨境地区的国际大学的 125 名学生进行的在线调查。我们使用基于协方差的结构方程模型来检验食物恐惧症量表的 6 项版本和上述说服策略对食用昆虫意愿的影响。结果表明,食物恐惧症会对说服策略产生负面影响,但后者确实对食用意愿产生积极影响。此外,该模型表明,食物恐惧症量表对食用昆虫意愿的负面影响完全被说服策略所中介。我们的研究结果与之前的研究一致,这些研究表明,同伴对食用昆虫安全性和可接受性的推荐,以及将其混入熟悉的食物中的做法,会增加人们食用昆虫的意愿。此外,昆虫销售的商业环境的重要性是食虫行为的驱动力。最后,我们的研究表明,引入关于昆虫作为食物来源的背景文化信息可能有助于避免对食虫行为的先入为主的错误假设。这也是最近生效的关于昆虫作为新型食品的欧盟法规 (EU) 2015/2283 的目的之一。我们讨论了这些发现对学者和从业者的影响。