Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation

Food imitating products are chemical consumer items used frequently in the household for cleaning and personal hygiene (e.g., bleach, soap, and shampoo), which resemble food products. Their containers replicate elements of food package design such as possessing a shape close in style to drinking pro...

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Main Authors: Frederic eBasso, Julien eBouillé, Kevin eLe Goff, Philippe eRobert-Demontrond, Olivier eOullier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00450/full
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spelling doaj-bce69520fdaf4318ac6426ef0cb941a92020-11-24T22:47:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-03-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.00450160431Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendationFrederic eBasso0Julien eBouillé1Kevin eLe Goff2Philippe eRobert-Demontrond3Olivier eOullier4London School of EconomicsUniversity of Rennes 2 Upper BrittanyAix Marseille UniversitéUniversity Rennes 1Aix Marseille UniversitéFood imitating products are chemical consumer items used frequently in the household for cleaning and personal hygiene (e.g., bleach, soap, and shampoo), which resemble food products. Their containers replicate elements of food package design such as possessing a shape close in style to drinking product containers or bearing labels that depict colourful fruits. In marketing, these incongruent forms are designed to increase the appeal of functional products, leading to chemical consumer product embellishment. However, due to the resulting visual ambiguity, food imitating products may expose consumers to the risk of being poisoned from ingestion. Thus, from a public health perspective, food imitating products are considered dangerous chemical products that should not be sold, and may merit being recalled for the safety of consumers. To help policymakers address the hazardous presence of food imitating products, the purpose of this article is to identify the specific design features that generate most ambiguity for the consumer, and therefore increase the likelihood of confusion with foodstuffs. Among the visual elements of food packaging, the two most important features (shape and label) are manipulated in a series of three lab studies combining six Implicit Association Tests (IATs) and two explicit measures on products’ drinkability and safety. IATs were administered to assess consumers’ implicit association of liquid products with tastiness in a within-subject design in which the participants (N=122) were presented with two kinds of food imitating products with a drink shape or drink label compared with drinks (experiential products with congruent form) and classic chemical products (hygiene products) (functional products with congruent form). Results show that chemical consumer products with incongruent drink shapes (but not drink labels) as an element of food package design are both implicitly associated with tastiness and explicitly judged as safe and drinkable. These results require confirmation in other studies involving different shapes and labels. Notwithstanding, due to the misleading effect of this ambiguity, public health authorities are thus well advised to focus their market surveillance on chemical products emulating a food or drink shape.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00450/fullHealth Policyimplicit association test (IAT)Food packageCategory ambiguityConsumer chemical productsPoison look-alikes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frederic eBasso
Julien eBouillé
Kevin eLe Goff
Philippe eRobert-Demontrond
Olivier eOullier
spellingShingle Frederic eBasso
Julien eBouillé
Kevin eLe Goff
Philippe eRobert-Demontrond
Olivier eOullier
Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation
Frontiers in Psychology
Health Policy
implicit association test (IAT)
Food package
Category ambiguity
Consumer chemical products
Poison look-alikes
author_facet Frederic eBasso
Julien eBouillé
Kevin eLe Goff
Philippe eRobert-Demontrond
Olivier eOullier
author_sort Frederic eBasso
title Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation
title_short Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation
title_full Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation
title_fullStr Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of Food Imitating Products: From empirical evidence to policy recommendation
title_sort assessing the role of shape and label in the misleading packaging of food imitating products: from empirical evidence to policy recommendation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Food imitating products are chemical consumer items used frequently in the household for cleaning and personal hygiene (e.g., bleach, soap, and shampoo), which resemble food products. Their containers replicate elements of food package design such as possessing a shape close in style to drinking product containers or bearing labels that depict colourful fruits. In marketing, these incongruent forms are designed to increase the appeal of functional products, leading to chemical consumer product embellishment. However, due to the resulting visual ambiguity, food imitating products may expose consumers to the risk of being poisoned from ingestion. Thus, from a public health perspective, food imitating products are considered dangerous chemical products that should not be sold, and may merit being recalled for the safety of consumers. To help policymakers address the hazardous presence of food imitating products, the purpose of this article is to identify the specific design features that generate most ambiguity for the consumer, and therefore increase the likelihood of confusion with foodstuffs. Among the visual elements of food packaging, the two most important features (shape and label) are manipulated in a series of three lab studies combining six Implicit Association Tests (IATs) and two explicit measures on products’ drinkability and safety. IATs were administered to assess consumers’ implicit association of liquid products with tastiness in a within-subject design in which the participants (N=122) were presented with two kinds of food imitating products with a drink shape or drink label compared with drinks (experiential products with congruent form) and classic chemical products (hygiene products) (functional products with congruent form). Results show that chemical consumer products with incongruent drink shapes (but not drink labels) as an element of food package design are both implicitly associated with tastiness and explicitly judged as safe and drinkable. These results require confirmation in other studies involving different shapes and labels. Notwithstanding, due to the misleading effect of this ambiguity, public health authorities are thus well advised to focus their market surveillance on chemical products emulating a food or drink shape.
topic Health Policy
implicit association test (IAT)
Food package
Category ambiguity
Consumer chemical products
Poison look-alikes
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00450/full
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