Effect of Disclosed Information on Product Liking, Emotional Profile, and Purchase Intent: A Case of Chocolate Brownies Containing Edible-Cricket Protein.
Cristhiam E GurdianDamir Dennis TorricoBin LiGeorgianna TuuriWitoon PrinyawiwatkulPublished in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Edible insects, a sustainable and nutritious alternative to conventionally derived proteins, are unfamiliar to Westerners and often associated with negative sentiments. Edible-cricket protein (ECP) added to chocolate brownies (CB) [0% ECP = CBWO (without) vs. 6% w/w ECP = CBW (with)], and disclosed information [no ECP added = (-) vs. ECP with benefits = (+), ECP- and ECP+, respectively] yielded four CB treatments (CBWO-, CBWO+, CBW-, and CBW+). Subjects (n = 112 female and n = 98 male) rated liking, selected emotions before- and after-tasting, and determined consumption (CI) and purchase intent (PI) after tasting. Likings were analyzed with mixed-effects ANOVA and post hoc Tukey's HSD test. Emotions were evaluated with Cochran's-Q test and correspondence analysis. Emotions driving or inhibiting overall liking (OL) were assessed with penalty-lift analyses using two-sample t-tests. A random forest algorithm was used to predict PI and estimate variables' importance. Female's and male's expected OL were higher for CBWO- than for CBWO+. Females' actual OL was higher for CBWO than for CBW regardless of the disclosed information but males' actual OL was the same across treatments. Females exhibited negative-liking disconfirmation for CBW-. In both tasting conditions, the disclosed information affected treatments' emotional profiles more than formulation. After-tasting emotions "happy" and "satisfied" were critical predictors of PI.