RMIT University
Browse

The who, what, where, when, why and how of measuring emotional response to food. A systematic review

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 19:42 authored by Yu Qing LowYu Qing Low, Nathalie Janin, Rachel Traill, Joanne Hort
Traditional consumer acceptance and preference testing rarely predicts food choice behaviour accurately.Increased interest in focusing on the total consumer experience, examining the relationship between the food and the consumer, and understanding that emotional processing drives human actions has led to the development of several instruments to capture consumer response beyond hedonic liking. This review aimed to identify and provide a comprehensive overview of the tools that have been used to measure emotion, implicitly and explicitly, in relation to food in the context of food behaviour. A second aim was to highlight the relative merits of key methodologies, research gaps and, based on the review findings, provide some recommendations for selecting food-evoked emotional response measures. The studies were assessed qualitatively using a 2 level (implicit,explicit) × 3 level (cognitive, behavioural, physiological) categorisation framework to conduct an exhaustive overview of measures used in current research. A total of 193 peer-reviewed studies evaluating consumer emotional response to food [published January 1997-March 2021] were identified, classified, and reviewed. Particularly, the why, when, what, where, who, and how of measuring food evoked emotion was discussed. No one “go-to” method to measure consumer emotional responses was evident and the optimal approach remains unknown. Several studies highlighted that, in principle, combining multiple measures would provide a clearer multidimensional insight into consumer emotional responses influencing consumer food choice behaviour. However, a clear gap remains in research investigating how emotional responses contribute to formulate better sensory experience and/or predict food choice.

History

Journal

Food Quality and Preference

Volume

100

Number

104607

Start page

1

End page

16

Total pages

16

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006114463

Esploro creation date

2022-09-21