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The Primacy of “What” over “How Much”: How Type and Quantity Shape Healthiness Perceptions of Food Portions

The Primacy of “What” over “How Much”: How Type and Quantity Shape Healthiness Perceptions of... Healthy eating goals influence many consumer choices, such that evaluating the healthiness of food portions is important. Given that both the type and quantity of food jointly contribute to weight and overall health, evaluations of a food portion’s healthiness ought to consider both type and quantity. However, existing literature tends to examine food type and food quantity separately. Across seven studies, we show that consumers treat type as a primary dimension and quantity as a secondary dimension, such that a change in type (versus quantity) has a greater impact on perceived healthiness or health goal impact, even when holding objective impact constant in terms of calories. We also examine whether one reason this effect occurs is because most consumers consider type (a categorical attribute) before quantity (a continuous attribute). We conclude by discussing extensions of these ideas to other perceptual assessments involving both type and quantity (e.g., price perceptions).The online appendix and data files are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2018.3098.This paper was accepted by Yuval Rottenstreich, decision analysis. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Management Science INFORMS

The Primacy of “What” over “How Much”: How Type and Quantity Shape Healthiness Perceptions of Food Portions

The Primacy of “What” over “How Much”: How Type and Quantity Shape Healthiness Perceptions of Food Portions

Management Science , Volume 65 (7): 29 – Jul 7, 2019

Abstract

Healthy eating goals influence many consumer choices, such that evaluating the healthiness of food portions is important. Given that both the type and quantity of food jointly contribute to weight and overall health, evaluations of a food portion’s healthiness ought to consider both type and quantity. However, existing literature tends to examine food type and food quantity separately. Across seven studies, we show that consumers treat type as a primary dimension and quantity as a secondary dimension, such that a change in type (versus quantity) has a greater impact on perceived healthiness or health goal impact, even when holding objective impact constant in terms of calories. We also examine whether one reason this effect occurs is because most consumers consider type (a categorical attribute) before quantity (a continuous attribute). We conclude by discussing extensions of these ideas to other perceptual assessments involving both type and quantity (e.g., price perceptions).The online appendix and data files are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2018.3098.This paper was accepted by Yuval Rottenstreich, decision analysis.

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References (87)

Publisher
INFORMS
Copyright
Copyright © INFORMS
ISSN
0025-1909
eISSN
1526-5501
DOI
10.1287/mnsc.2018.3098
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Healthy eating goals influence many consumer choices, such that evaluating the healthiness of food portions is important. Given that both the type and quantity of food jointly contribute to weight and overall health, evaluations of a food portion’s healthiness ought to consider both type and quantity. However, existing literature tends to examine food type and food quantity separately. Across seven studies, we show that consumers treat type as a primary dimension and quantity as a secondary dimension, such that a change in type (versus quantity) has a greater impact on perceived healthiness or health goal impact, even when holding objective impact constant in terms of calories. We also examine whether one reason this effect occurs is because most consumers consider type (a categorical attribute) before quantity (a continuous attribute). We conclude by discussing extensions of these ideas to other perceptual assessments involving both type and quantity (e.g., price perceptions).The online appendix and data files are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2018.3098.This paper was accepted by Yuval Rottenstreich, decision analysis.

Journal

Management ScienceINFORMS

Published: Jul 7, 2019

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