Cheon Bobby K, Tan Yan Fen, Forde Ciarán G
Social & Behavioral Sciences Branch, Division of Intramural Population Health Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, USA.
Clinical Nutrition Research Centre, Singapore Institute of Food Biotechnology Innovation, Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Singapore.
Food Qual Prefer. 2024 Aug;117. doi: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2024.105173. Epub 2024 Mar 24.
Despite the impact of processed foods on health, sustainability, and food security, consumers vary greatly in expectations about and preferences for processed foods. Essentialism is the lay belief that items in a category share a fundamental and immutable essence that generates the category's defining characteristics. Although essentialism may be an important determinant of consumers' cognitions about processed foods, there has been limited investigation of essentialism's role in food-related perceptions. Across two studies (n=598 total), we used a novel measure of food essentialism to examine whether individual differences in beliefs about foods as having essences (food essentialism) are related to perceptions of foods retaining more of their natural characteristics (sensory and nutritive properties) despite their level of processing. Across diverse food categories (meats, vegetables, fruits, legumes, dairy), higher levels of perceived food processing were associated with lower perceived retention of naturalness, nutritiousness, natural taste, functional post-ingestive benefits, and acceptability (liking). However, participants endorsing greater (vs. lower) food essentialism beliefs exhibited weaker relationships between perceived processing and these characteristics. We also observed variations across food categories in relationships between perceived level of processing and food properties, suggesting that some foods (i.e., milk-based products) are perceived to possess essences that are more robust despite undergoing higher levels of processing. These findings demonstrate that food-specific essentialism beliefs may be a fundamental determinant of consumers' expectations of how human intervention, such as processing, affects natural properties of foods. These beliefs may be a promising target for future research to shift consumer acceptance of processed foods.
尽管加工食品对健康、可持续性和粮食安全有影响,但消费者对加工食品的期望和偏好差异很大。本质主义是一种外行观点,即某一类别中的物品共享一种基本且不变的本质,这种本质产生了该类别的定义特征。虽然本质主义可能是消费者对加工食品认知的一个重要决定因素,但关于本质主义在与食品相关认知中的作用的研究有限。在两项研究(共598人)中,我们使用了一种新的食品本质主义测量方法,来检验关于食物具有本质的信念(食品本质主义)的个体差异是否与对食物在加工后仍保留更多自然特征(感官和营养特性)的认知有关。在不同的食品类别(肉类、蔬菜、水果、豆类、乳制品)中,较高的加工程度与较低的自然度、营养性、自然味道、食用后功能益处和可接受性(喜好度)的认知相关。然而,支持更高(而非更低)食品本质主义信念的参与者在加工认知与这些特征之间表现出较弱的关系。我们还观察到,加工程度认知与食品特性之间的关系在不同食品类别中存在差异,这表明一些食品(即奶制品)在经过更高程度的加工后,仍被认为具有更稳固的本质。这些发现表明,特定于食品的本质主义信念可能是消费者对诸如加工等人类干预如何影响食品自然特性的期望的一个基本决定因素。这些信念可能是未来研究改变消费者对加工食品接受度的一个有前景的目标。