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Try It, You'll like It: The Influence of Expectation, Consumption, and Revelation on Preferences for Beer

Patrons of a pub evaluated regular beer and "MIT brew" (regular beer plus a few drops of balsamic vinegar) in one of three conditions. One group tasted the samples blind (the secret ingredient was never disclosed). A second group was informed of the contents before tasting. A third group l...

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Published in:Psychological science 2006-12, Vol.17 (12), p.1054-1058
Main Authors: Lee, Leonard, Frederick, Shane, Ariely, Dan
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Language:English
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Frederick, Shane
Ariely, Dan
description Patrons of a pub evaluated regular beer and "MIT brew" (regular beer plus a few drops of balsamic vinegar) in one of three conditions. One group tasted the samples blind (the secret ingredient was never disclosed). A second group was informed of the contents before tasting. A third group learned of the secret ingredient immediately after tasting, but prior to indicating their preference. Not surprisingly, preference for the MIT brew was higher in the blind condition than in either of the two disclosure conditions. However, the timing of the information mattered substantially. Disclosure of the secret ingredient significantly reduced preference only when the disclosure preceded tasting, suggesting that disclosure affected preferences by influencing the experience itself, rather than by acting as an independent negative input or by modifying retrospective interpretation of the experience.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01829.x
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subjects Acetic Acid - administration & dosage
Ageusia
Alcohol Drinking - psychology
Beer
Beer industry
Beers
Cartoons
Choice Behavior - physiology
Descriptive labeling
Disclosure
Food Preferences - psychology
Gustation
Humans
Memory
Perception - physiology
Personality psychology
Social psychology
Students - psychology
Time Factors
Vinegars
title Try It, You'll like It: The Influence of Expectation, Consumption, and Revelation on Preferences for Beer
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