The adaptive eater: Perceived healthiness moderates the effect of the color red on consumption

L Reutner, O Genschow, M Wänke - Food quality and Preference, 2015 - Elsevier
Food quality and Preference, 2015Elsevier
Previous studies suggest that the color red reduces food intake because it signals danger
and hence acts as a consumption-stopping cue. We demonstrate that this effect cannot be
generalized to just any kind of food. Consequently, we show that the color red—despite
eliciting similar associations—affects behavior more strongly with regard to unhealthy
(potentially harmful) food compared to healthy food. Specifically, the color red more strongly
influenced the amount of unhealthy food intake (Study 1) and the choice of unhealthy food …
Abstract
Previous studies suggest that the color red reduces food intake because it signals danger and hence acts as a consumption-stopping cue. We demonstrate that this effect cannot be generalized to just any kind of food. Consequently, we show that the color red—despite eliciting similar associations—affects behavior more strongly with regard to unhealthy (potentially harmful) food compared to healthy food. Specifically, the color red more strongly influenced the amount of unhealthy food intake (Study 1) and the choice of unhealthy food options (Study 2) compared to healthy food. Study 2 further demonstrated that the impact of color on behavior decreases gradually as food options become healthier. Moreover, the effect can be observed for subtle (Study 1) as well as salient (Study 2) color cues. These results suggest that consumers do not react in a generalized but in an adaptive way to the color red.
Elsevier
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