2016
DOI: 10.3390/su8090899
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Influence of Source Credibility on Consumer Acceptance of Genetically Modified Foods in China

Abstract: This paper examines the reasoning mechanism behind the consumer acceptance of genetically modified foods (GMFs) in China, and investigates influence of source credibility on consumer acceptance of GMFs. Based on the original Persuasion Model-which was developed by Carl Hovland, an American psychologist and pioneer in the study of communication and its effect on attitudes and beliefs-we conducted a survey using multistage sampling from 1167 urban residents, which were proportionally selected from six cities in … Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

6
25
0

Year Published

2017
2017
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
8
1

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 35 publications
(31 citation statements)
references
References 26 publications
6
25
0
Order By: Relevance
“…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., ).…”
Section: Results Of the Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…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., ).…”
Section: Results Of the Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since activists have been spreading information about the potential risk of GM technology on social media [47], trust in the food system and regulatory institutions and knowledge of GM technology are important factors affecting consumers' attitudes about GM foods [48][49][50][51]. Consumers' attitudes toward GM foods are also influenced by social characteristics, such as age, gender, education, and individual's scientific background [46,[52][53][54].…”
Section: Determinants Of Interest Groups' Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To determine how to measure credibility, we reviewed literature from psychology, communication, and marketing. These fields have determined that the trustworthiness of the source and the source's expertise regarding the topic at hand are common, foundational elements of credibility [41][42][43]. When risks are novel, individuals are more likely to accept risky practices when they trust the information source promoting the seemingly risky behavior.…”
Section: Source Credibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These ideas of trust, expertise, legitimacy, and credibility have been explored in a number of contexts, including Gustafsson's study [51] of how trust of governmental agencies affects acceptance of climate change policies and Zhang et al's [43] study that found trust and source credibility affects consumer acceptance of genetically modified foods [43].…”
Section: Source Credibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%