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Multisensory contextual cues and information affect plant-based food choices and taste perception

The context in which food is selected and consumed is an important factor in its choice, consumption, and acceptability. This study assessed the effect of information and multisensory contexts on meat-related food choices and taste perception. In total, 224 participants first watched one of two pitc...

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Published in:Food quality and preference 2025-05, Vol.126, p.105385, Article 105385
Main Authors: Zandstra, E.H., Van Os, D.E., Van der Burg, E., Stuldreher, I.V., Toet, A., Velut, S., Hiraguchi, H., Hogervorst, M.A., Brouwer, A.-M., Van Erp, J.B.F.
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container_start_page 105385
container_title Food quality and preference
container_volume 126
creator Zandstra, E.H.
Van Os, D.E.
Van der Burg, E.
Stuldreher, I.V.
Toet, A.
Velut, S.
Hiraguchi, H.
Hogervorst, M.A.
Brouwer, A.-M.
Van Erp, J.B.F.
description The context in which food is selected and consumed is an important factor in its choice, consumption, and acceptability. This study assessed the effect of information and multisensory contexts on meat-related food choices and taste perception. In total, 224 participants first watched one of two pitches, either discussing the implications of consuming animal meat (sustainable pitch) or promoting body movement (control pitch). Participants were then exposed to one of three multisensory contexts: a ‘sustainable’ context with natural green colours, nature sounds and a flower fragrance, a ‘meat’ context with red colours, the sounds of country music and a smokey BBQ smell, and a monotone off-white ‘neutral’ context with neutral background music and no additional smell. Participants were instructed to choose one of two presented hotdogs (animal meat hotdog or plant-based meat hotdog) and to taste and rate the chosen one on liking and taste attributes. Results showed that multisensory sustainable contextual cues combined with information on sustainability beforehand increased the likelihood of choosing plant-based meat hotdogs over animal meat hotdogs. In addition, while tasting the plant-based meat hotdog, multisensory contextual cues that are inspired by a meat context appeared to enhance taste perception, even for vegans and vegetarians. These findings provide further evidence for the importance of context in food choice and acceptance: the context where people choose plant-based meat should preferably be separated and different from the context of consumption. The findings also imply that information can change behaviour, not just attitudes as previous research indicated, but only if combined with multisensory cues in the context. •Multisensory sustainable contexts and sustainability info increased people's choice of plant-based meat.•Plant-based meat tastes better in a multisensory meat context.•Choice and consumption contexts should have different multisensory contextual cues.•Information can change behaviour if combined with multisensory cues in the context.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.foodqual.2024.105385
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects animals
flowers
Food choice
food choices
food quality
Information
meat
Multisensory context
music
odors
people
plant-based foods
Plant-based meat
Real-life
smell
taste
Taste perception
title Multisensory contextual cues and information affect plant-based food choices and taste perception
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