FGV Repositório Digital
    • português (Brasil)
    • English
    • español
      Acesse:
    • FGV Biblioteca Digital
    • FGV Periódicos científicos e revistas
  • português (Brasil) 
    • português (Brasil)
    • English
    • español
  • Entrar
Ver item 
  •   Página inicial
  • Produção Intelectual em Bases Externas
  • Documentos indexados pela Scopus
  • Ver item
  •   Página inicial
  • Produção Intelectual em Bases Externas
  • Documentos indexados pela Scopus
  • Ver item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Navegar

Todo o repositórioComunidades FGVAutorOrientadorAssuntoTítuloDataPalavra-chaveEsta coleçãoAutorOrientadorAssuntoTítuloDataPalavra-chave

Minha conta

EntrarCadastro

Estatísticas

Ver as estatísticas de uso

Appetitive drives for ultra-processed food products and the ability of text warnings to counteract consumption predispositions

Thumbnail
Visualizar/Abrir
2-s2.0-85038252292.pdf (868.1Kb)
Data
2018
Autor
David, Isabel de Paula Antunes
Rezende, Laura Krutman
Fernández-Santaella, María Carmen
Andrade, Jéssica R.
Andrade, Eduardo Bittencourt
Oliveira, Letícia
Fortes, Mirtes Garcia Pereira
Gomes, Fabio da Silva
Gleiser, Sonia
Oliveira, José M.
Araújo, Renata L.
Volchan, E.
Santos, Filipe Braga dos
Metadados
Mostrar registro completo
Resumo
Objective The present study aimed to (i) assess the appetitive drives evoked by the visual cues of ultra-processed food and drink products and (ii) investigate whether text warnings reduce appetitive drives and consumers' reported intentions to eat or drink ultra-processed products. Design In Study I, a well-established psychometric tool was applied to estimate the appetitive drives associated with ultra-processed products using sixty-four image representations. Sixteen product types with four exemplars of a given product were included. Pictures from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) served as controls. The two exemplars of each product type rated as more appetitive were selected for investigation in the second study. Study II assessed the impact of textual warnings on the appetitive drive towards these thirty-two exemplars. Each participant was exposed to two picture exemplars of the same product type preceded by a text warning or a control text. After viewing each displayed picture, the participants reported their emotional reactions and their intention to consume the product. Setting Controlled classroom experiments Subjects Undergraduate students (Study I: n 215, 135 women; Study II: n 98, 52 women). Results In Study I, the pictures of ultra-processed products prompted an appetitive motivation associated with the products' nutritional content. In Study II, text warnings were effective in reducing the intention to consume and the appetitive drive evoked by ultra-processed products. Conclusions This research provides initial evidence favouring the use of text warnings as a public policy tool to curb the powerful influence of highly appetitive ultra-processed food cues. © Copyright The Authors 2017.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10438/25531
Coleções
  • Documentos indexados pela Scopus [664]
Assunto
Alimentos - Consumo
Palavra-chave
Emotion
Self-Assessment Manikin
Ultra-Processed Food
Unhealthy Diet
Warning Labels

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Entre em contato | Deixe sua opinião
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 


DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Entre em contato | Deixe sua opinião
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 

Importar metadado