Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study

This study aimed to examine the emotional responses evoked by cooked colored rice and its health functionality information in both consumers who eat rice as a staple food and consumers who do not eat rice as a staple food. Specifically, Korean and American consumers were exposed to colored rice and...

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Main Authors: Jin A Jang, Ji Eun Oh, Yeseul Na, Ga Eun Yeo, Mi Sook Cho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Foods
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/10/2/231
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spelling doaj-7ddb817ba91e462e86353731c655d89e2021-01-24T00:03:07ZengMDPI AGFoods2304-81582021-01-011023123110.3390/foods10020231Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural StudyJin A Jang0Ji Eun Oh1Yeseul Na2Ga Eun Yeo3Mi Sook Cho4Nutritional Science and Food Management Department, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760, KoreaCollege of Science & Industry Convergence, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760, KoreaNutritional Science and Food Management Department, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760, KoreaNutritional Science and Food Management Department, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760, KoreaNutritional Science and Food Management Department, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 03760, KoreaThis study aimed to examine the emotional responses evoked by cooked colored rice and its health functionality information in both consumers who eat rice as a staple food and consumers who do not eat rice as a staple food. Specifically, Korean and American consumers were exposed to colored rice and its health functionality information and an emotion lexicon was generated and measured based on focus group interviews (FGI) and two online consumer surveys. In test 1, the emotions evoked by presentation of stimuli to Koreans (<i>N</i> = 10) and Americans (<i>N</i> = 10) were extracted through FGIs and the first online consumer survey (Koreans = 69; Americans = 68) and an emotion lexicon was generated. As a result, a total of 34 terms were confirmed. Test 2 was conducted during the second online consumer survey (capturing data from a total of 208 Koreans and 208 Americans), utilizing the terms generated in test 1. In this test, only the colors (CO) of colored rice were presented to one group, while colors and health functionality information (CO&H) were presented to the other group. The overall liking for stimuli in both countries was highly correlated with familiarity. Koreans showed significantly more familiarity and liking for CO of white and black CO rice, while Americans showed significantly more familiarity and liking for CO of white and yellow rice. Hierarchical cluster analysis was performed to categorize the emotion terms, and the emotion terms were sorted into the three clusters, “Positive”, “Negative”, and “New”, for both countries. Under informed conditions, the emotions became more positive, and emotions in the “New” cluster were evoked in both countries. The current study employed a cross-cultural approach to assess consumers’ emotional responses to colored rice and health functionality information. Our findings suggest that providing foods with preferred colors for each culture and providing sufficient information on the said foods will help to promote unfamiliar foods.https://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/10/2/231emotion measurementemotion lexiconemotion responsefoodfamiliarity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jin A Jang
Ji Eun Oh
Yeseul Na
Ga Eun Yeo
Mi Sook Cho
spellingShingle Jin A Jang
Ji Eun Oh
Yeseul Na
Ga Eun Yeo
Mi Sook Cho
Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study
Foods
emotion measurement
emotion lexicon
emotion response
food
familiarity
author_facet Jin A Jang
Ji Eun Oh
Yeseul Na
Ga Eun Yeo
Mi Sook Cho
author_sort Jin A Jang
title Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study
title_short Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study
title_full Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study
title_fullStr Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study
title_full_unstemmed Emotions Evoked by Colors and Health Functionality Information of Colored Rice: A Cross-Cultural Study
title_sort emotions evoked by colors and health functionality information of colored rice: a cross-cultural study
publisher MDPI AG
series Foods
issn 2304-8158
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This study aimed to examine the emotional responses evoked by cooked colored rice and its health functionality information in both consumers who eat rice as a staple food and consumers who do not eat rice as a staple food. Specifically, Korean and American consumers were exposed to colored rice and its health functionality information and an emotion lexicon was generated and measured based on focus group interviews (FGI) and two online consumer surveys. In test 1, the emotions evoked by presentation of stimuli to Koreans (<i>N</i> = 10) and Americans (<i>N</i> = 10) were extracted through FGIs and the first online consumer survey (Koreans = 69; Americans = 68) and an emotion lexicon was generated. As a result, a total of 34 terms were confirmed. Test 2 was conducted during the second online consumer survey (capturing data from a total of 208 Koreans and 208 Americans), utilizing the terms generated in test 1. In this test, only the colors (CO) of colored rice were presented to one group, while colors and health functionality information (CO&H) were presented to the other group. The overall liking for stimuli in both countries was highly correlated with familiarity. Koreans showed significantly more familiarity and liking for CO of white and black CO rice, while Americans showed significantly more familiarity and liking for CO of white and yellow rice. Hierarchical cluster analysis was performed to categorize the emotion terms, and the emotion terms were sorted into the three clusters, “Positive”, “Negative”, and “New”, for both countries. Under informed conditions, the emotions became more positive, and emotions in the “New” cluster were evoked in both countries. The current study employed a cross-cultural approach to assess consumers’ emotional responses to colored rice and health functionality information. Our findings suggest that providing foods with preferred colors for each culture and providing sufficient information on the said foods will help to promote unfamiliar foods.
topic emotion measurement
emotion lexicon
emotion response
food
familiarity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2304-8158/10/2/231
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