“…Thereby, a higher education and/or higher income resulted in higher positive evaluation of novel food technologies (with respect to GM: Abdulkadri, Pinnock, & Tennant, ; Laros & Steenkamp, ; Pardo, Midden, & Miller, ; fortification: Brečić et al., ; Kavoosi‐Kalashami et al., ; Landstrom, Hursti, Becker, & Magnusson, ; and nanotechnology: Matin et al., ; Sodano et al., ). Other studies showed that consumers with higher education and/or income had a negative perception toward new food technologies (Chen, Liu, Nanseki, Li, & Chen, ; Giamalva, Bailey, & Redfern, ; Poortinga, ; Zhang, Chen, Hu, Chen, & Zhan, ; Zheng, Gao, Zhang, & Henneberry, ). - Health care/ status: Both terms are often used with GM and functional food studies and results tend to show positive influences. We observed a positively perceived health status increased the likelihood to use a functional food ingredient (Cranfield et al., ).
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