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Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice

In the current study we show that non-verbal food-evoked emotion scores significantly improve food choice prediction over merely liking scores. Previous research has shown that liking measures correlate with choice. However, liking is no strong predictor for food choice in real life environments. Th...

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Autores principales: Dalenberg, Jelle R., Gutjar, Swetlana, ter Horst, Gert J., de Graaf, Kees, Renken, Remco J., Jager, Gerry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4270769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25521352
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115388
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author Dalenberg, Jelle R.
Gutjar, Swetlana
ter Horst, Gert J.
de Graaf, Kees
Renken, Remco J.
Jager, Gerry
author_facet Dalenberg, Jelle R.
Gutjar, Swetlana
ter Horst, Gert J.
de Graaf, Kees
Renken, Remco J.
Jager, Gerry
author_sort Dalenberg, Jelle R.
collection PubMed
description In the current study we show that non-verbal food-evoked emotion scores significantly improve food choice prediction over merely liking scores. Previous research has shown that liking measures correlate with choice. However, liking is no strong predictor for food choice in real life environments. Therefore, the focus within recent studies shifted towards using emotion-profiling methods that successfully can discriminate between products that are equally liked. However, it is unclear how well scores from emotion-profiling methods predict actual food choice and/or consumption. To test this, we proposed to decompose emotion scores into valence and arousal scores using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and apply Multinomial Logit Models (MLM) to estimate food choice using liking, valence, and arousal as possible predictors. For this analysis, we used an existing data set comprised of liking and food-evoked emotions scores from 123 participants, who rated 7 unlabeled breakfast drinks. Liking scores were measured using a 100-mm visual analogue scale, while food-evoked emotions were measured using 2 existing emotion-profiling methods: a verbal and a non-verbal method (EsSense Profile and PrEmo, respectively). After 7 days, participants were asked to choose 1 breakfast drink from the experiment to consume during breakfast in a simulated restaurant environment. Cross validation showed that we were able to correctly predict individualized food choice (1 out of 7 products) for over 50% of the participants. This number increased to nearly 80% when looking at the top 2 candidates. Model comparisons showed that evoked emotions better predict food choice than perceived liking alone. However, the strongest predictive strength was achieved by the combination of evoked emotions and liking. Furthermore we showed that non-verbal food-evoked emotion scores more accurately predict food choice than verbal food-evoked emotions scores.
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spelling pubmed-42707692014-12-26 Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice Dalenberg, Jelle R. Gutjar, Swetlana ter Horst, Gert J. de Graaf, Kees Renken, Remco J. Jager, Gerry PLoS One Research Article In the current study we show that non-verbal food-evoked emotion scores significantly improve food choice prediction over merely liking scores. Previous research has shown that liking measures correlate with choice. However, liking is no strong predictor for food choice in real life environments. Therefore, the focus within recent studies shifted towards using emotion-profiling methods that successfully can discriminate between products that are equally liked. However, it is unclear how well scores from emotion-profiling methods predict actual food choice and/or consumption. To test this, we proposed to decompose emotion scores into valence and arousal scores using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and apply Multinomial Logit Models (MLM) to estimate food choice using liking, valence, and arousal as possible predictors. For this analysis, we used an existing data set comprised of liking and food-evoked emotions scores from 123 participants, who rated 7 unlabeled breakfast drinks. Liking scores were measured using a 100-mm visual analogue scale, while food-evoked emotions were measured using 2 existing emotion-profiling methods: a verbal and a non-verbal method (EsSense Profile and PrEmo, respectively). After 7 days, participants were asked to choose 1 breakfast drink from the experiment to consume during breakfast in a simulated restaurant environment. Cross validation showed that we were able to correctly predict individualized food choice (1 out of 7 products) for over 50% of the participants. This number increased to nearly 80% when looking at the top 2 candidates. Model comparisons showed that evoked emotions better predict food choice than perceived liking alone. However, the strongest predictive strength was achieved by the combination of evoked emotions and liking. Furthermore we showed that non-verbal food-evoked emotion scores more accurately predict food choice than verbal food-evoked emotions scores. Public Library of Science 2014-12-18 /pmc/articles/PMC4270769/ /pubmed/25521352 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115388 Text en © 2014 Dalenberg et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dalenberg, Jelle R.
Gutjar, Swetlana
ter Horst, Gert J.
de Graaf, Kees
Renken, Remco J.
Jager, Gerry
Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice
title Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice
title_full Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice
title_fullStr Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice
title_full_unstemmed Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice
title_short Evoked Emotions Predict Food Choice
title_sort evoked emotions predict food choice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4270769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25521352
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115388
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