Food for thought: the effect of counterfactual thinking on the use of nutrition information
โ Scribed by Khaled Aboulnasr; Anu Sivaraman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 265 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1472-0817
- DOI
- 10.1002/cb.311
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
In three experiments, we examine the efficacy of counterfactual thinking (CFT) as a strategy to enhance consumers' motivation to process and use nutrition information on food packages. In the first study, we test whether CFT leads to greater motivation to process nutrition label information in the process of forming product attitudes. We also test whether motivation mediates the relationship between CFT and the influence of the nutrition label in product evaluation. In a second study, we test the effect of upward versus downward CFT on motivation. We also examine whether nutrition information on food packages moderates the relationship between CFT and product attitudes. In a third study, we examined the duration of the motivational effect of CFT. Results from the three studies support the role of CFT as a mechanism that enhances consumers' motivation to elaborate on and use nutrition information to form product attitudes. Copyright ยฉ 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract All is flux. โPlato on Knowledge in the __Theaetetus__ (about 369 BC) Relevance is a, if not even **__the__**, key notion in information science in general and information retrieval in particular. This twoโpart critical review traces and synthesizes the scholarship on relevance over t
The e โ ect of hydrochloric acid treatment for the dehulling of palm kernel on the nutritional quality of its protein was studied and compared with that of untreated kernel protein and casein. Rats fed a treated defatted kernel protein diet had slightly lower gains in body weight (59ร5 g) when compar
Two experiments were conducted to determine the effect of pelleting and/or expander processing on the nutritive value of feed when fed to growing and ยฎnishing pigs. Experiment 1 determined the effects of pelleting and/or expander processing on the apparent nutrient digestibility of the diets. In exp
Under conditions of higher or lower uncertainty, college students recalled three or eight ways to improve exam performance and then estimated their likelihood of getting As on their easiest and hardest ยฎnals. Results supported the hypothesis that the availability heuristic is used only under conditi