Quantification of Consumer Attitudes to Health and Hedonic Characteristics of Foods

Health and Taste Attitudes Questionnaires were developed to assess consumers' orientations toward the health and hedonic characteristics of foods. Items were generated in a qualitative study. The original 37 items on health and 44 on taste were rated from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree" by a representative sample of 1005 Finnish adults (18-81 years). The number of items was reduced using factor and item analysis, resulting in 20 health- and 18 taste-related statements. Three health-related and three taste-related factors were extracted. The health-related factors were labelled as "General health interest", "Light product interest", and "Natural product interest". The taste-related factors were named "Craving for sweet foods", "Using food as a reward", and "Pleasure". Cronbach's alphas of the multi-item scales, based on the statements loading highly on each factor, ranged from 0.67 to 0.89. Age and gender affected the responses. Females were more interested in the health and taste aspects of foods than were males. Younger respondents were less concerned with health but more interested in taste than were older respondents. A preliminary test of predictive validity was conducted by analysing subjects' responses to foods with weak and strong connotations of health and taste, and currently the questionnaires are being validated with further behavioural tests.

[1]  J. Rodin,et al.  Food cravings in relation to body mass index, restraint and estradiol levels: A repeated measures study in healthy women , 1991, Appetite.

[2]  Armand V. Cardello,et al.  Antecedents and Consequences of Expectations Related to Fat-free and Regular-fat Foods , 1994, Appetite.

[3]  R. Pangborn,et al.  Prediction of reported consumption of selected fat-containing foods , 1988, Appetite.

[4]  Jane Wardle,et al.  Food choices and health evaluation , 1993 .

[5]  I. Hornstein,et al.  FOOD PREFERENCES OF COLLEGE STUDENTS AND NUTRITIONAL IMPLICATIONS , 1970 .

[6]  R. Shepherd,et al.  Application of Fishbein and Ajzen's expectancy-value model to understanding fat intake , 1992, Appetite.

[7]  M. Pelchat Food Cravings in Young and Elderly Adults , 1997, Appetite.

[8]  H. Weingarten,et al.  The phenomenology of food cravings , 1990, Appetite.

[9]  R. Downey,et al.  Reasons for eating: An exploratory cognitive analysis , 1992 .

[10]  J. Wardle,et al.  Eating style and eating behaviour in adolescents , 1992, Appetite.

[11]  Hely Tuorila,et al.  Health and taste attitudes in the prediction of use frequency and choice between less healthy and more healthy snacks , 1999 .

[12]  Johannes Brug,et al.  Psychosocial determinants of fruit and vegetable consumption among adults: Results of focus group interviews , 1995 .

[13]  H. Weingarten,et al.  Food cravings in a college population , 1991, Appetite.

[14]  J. Guinard,et al.  Acceptability of fat-modified foods to children, adolescents and their parents: Effect of sensory properties, nutritional information and price , 1997 .

[15]  L. Holm,et al.  Consumers' Views on Food Quality. A Qualitative Interview Study , 1996, Appetite.

[16]  Hely Tuorila,et al.  Selection of milks with varying fat contents and related overall liking, attitudes, norms and intentions , 1987, Appetite.

[17]  J. Michela,et al.  Food choice among adolescents: population segmentation by motivations , 1988 .

[18]  J. Wardle,et al.  The European Health and Behaviour Survey: rationale, methods and initial results from the United Kingdom. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[19]  A. Stunkard,et al.  The three-factor eating questionnaire to measure dietary restraint, disinhibition and hunger. , 1985, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[20]  J. Wardle,et al.  Development of a Measure of the Motives Underlying the Selection of Food: the Food Choice Questionnaire , 1995, Appetite.

[21]  P. Pliner,et al.  Development of a scale to measure the trait of food neophobia in humans , 1992, Appetite.

[22]  M. P. Penfield,et al.  Food- and nutrition-related attitudes of elderly persons living alone , 1983 .

[23]  Paul Rozin,et al.  Chocolate craving and liking , 1991, Appetite.

[24]  P. Sjödén,et al.  Reasons for Rejection of Food Items in Swedish Families with Children Aged 2–17 , 1996, Appetite.

[25]  J. Wardle,et al.  Cognitive predictors of health behaviour in contrasting regions of Europe. , 1992, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[26]  Tatjana van Strien,et al.  The predictive validity of the Dutch Restrained Eating Scale , 1986 .

[27]  B. Murphy,et al.  Psycho-social factors differentiating people who reported making desirable changes in their diets from those who did not , 1990 .

[28]  W. Dietz,et al.  Revising the Dietary Guidelines for Americans: history and rationale. , 1994, Nutrition reviews.

[29]  A. Stafleu,et al.  Attitudes Towards High-Fat Foods and Their Low-fat Alternatives: Reliability and Relationship with Fat Intake , 1994, Appetite.

[30]  J. Wardle,et al.  Healthy dietary practices among European students , 1997 .

[31]  Schafer Rb Factors affecting food behavior and the quality of husbands' and wives' diets. , 1978 .

[32]  C. Ross,et al.  Concern with appearance, health beliefs, and eating habits. , 1987, Journal of health and social behavior.

[33]  A. Truswell Evolution of dietary recommendations, goals, and guidelines. , 1987, The American journal of clinical nutrition.