| Literature DB >> 31438489 |
Rachel Smith1, Bridget Kelly2, Heather Yeatman3, Stuart Johnstone4, Louise Baur5, Lesley King6, Emma Boyland7, Kathy Chapman8,9,10, Clare Hughes8, Adrian Bauman11.
Abstract
Children's favourite food and beverage brands use various tactics to foster positive associations and loyalty. This brand-consumer dynamic is frequently influenced by the use of implicit techniques and emotional appeals. Few studies have used physiological methods to examine the connections that brands build with children and the influence this has on their automatic responses. These techniques are potentially less prone to bias than behavioural or cognitive methods. This is the first study to explore the implicit response that children have to images of their favourite food and beverage brands using skin conductance responses as a marker of arousal. Australian children aged 8-11 years (n = 48) were recruited. Images of the participants' favourite branded food and beverage products, alongside images of the same products unpackaged, their family and friends, and neutral objects were presented in a randomised order with a standard timed interval between images. Children were significantly more aroused by branded images of their favourite food and beverage products than by their unpackaged counterparts (p < 0.042, d = 0.4). The physiological response to the branded products was similar to the response to the children's family and friends (p = 0.900, d = -0.02). These findings suggest that children may have an implicit connection to their favourite branded products.Entities:
Keywords: childhood obesity; electrodermal activity; food and beverage branding; food marketing; food packaging; public health; skin conductance responses
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31438489 PMCID: PMC6747165 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16173014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Skin conductance responses for all stimuli.
| Within-Subject SCR-Amp to Stimuli (Mean Microsiemens μS) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Unbranded Foods and Beverages | Branded Food and Beverages | Family & Friends | Filler |
| 0.64 | 1.24 | 1.27 | 1.27 |
Figure 1Skin conductance responses. * Indicates significance value between conditions.