2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.11.102
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Sweet taste of prosocial status signaling: When eating organic foods makes you happy and hopeful

Abstract: As the current research suggests that there are links between prosocial acts and status signaling (including sustainable consumer choices), we empirically study (with three experiments) whether food consumers go green to be seen. First, we examine how activating a motive for status influences prosocial organic food preferences. Then, we examine how the social visibility of the choice (private vs. public) affects these preferences. We found that when consumers' desire for status was elicited, they preferred org… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(58 citation statements)
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References 111 publications
(133 reference statements)
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“…One possible explanation is that the higher maturity and extent of the organic market in Norway, where organic products are available in any typical supermarket, may result in a broader range of organic consumers who are not primarily driven by health, natural, or ecological values. Specifically, previous research indicates a large variation in consumer motives for choosing organic products, including the conviction of a better taste, food safety, naturalness, quality assurance, and status signaling [63,[81][82][83][84]. Interestingly, recent research has also highlighted how internal versus external personal health locus of control (i.e., the degree to which people believe that they have control over their health, as opposed to external forces beyond their control (source: Wikipedia)) moderates organic food intake [85].…”
Section: Organic Consumers and Health Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One possible explanation is that the higher maturity and extent of the organic market in Norway, where organic products are available in any typical supermarket, may result in a broader range of organic consumers who are not primarily driven by health, natural, or ecological values. Specifically, previous research indicates a large variation in consumer motives for choosing organic products, including the conviction of a better taste, food safety, naturalness, quality assurance, and status signaling [63,[81][82][83][84]. Interestingly, recent research has also highlighted how internal versus external personal health locus of control (i.e., the degree to which people believe that they have control over their health, as opposed to external forces beyond their control (source: Wikipedia)) moderates organic food intake [85].…”
Section: Organic Consumers and Health Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It suggests that regardless of the culture, consumers are able to link various qualities such as hedonism, healthiness, reputation, environmental friendliness, and animal welfare to sustainable product choices (cf. Puska, Kurki, L€ ahdesm€ aki, Siltaoja, & Luomala, 2018;Rahman, 2019). This positive development process could be cultivated by government authorities, media, and celebrities worldwide (Lundahl, 2017).…”
Section: Theoretical Social and Managerial Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Por sua vez, o CP2 contabilizou 15,81% da variância e relacionou-se positivamente com um termo emocional positivo ('prazeroso'). -ZAMORA et al, 2014;PUSKA et al, 2018). Puska et al (2018) encontraram que consumidores ficavam de melhor humor ao optar por um alimento prósocial, como o orgânico, uma vez que o alimento escolhido pelos mesmos era benéfico para a sociedade e para o meio ambiente.…”
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“…-ZAMORA et al, 2014;PUSKA et al, 2018). Puska et al (2018) encontraram que consumidores ficavam de melhor humor ao optar por um alimento prósocial, como o orgânico, uma vez que o alimento escolhido pelos mesmos era benéfico para a sociedade e para o meio ambiente. Adicionalmente, os autores encontraram que optar por alimentos orgânicos deixava os consumidores mais felizes tendo em vista expectativas de reputação positiva (PUSKA et al, 2018).…”
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