4.7 Article

Effect of informative claims on the attitude of Italian consumers towards cultured meat and relationship among variables used in an explicit approach

Journal

FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
Volume 151, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2021.110881

Keywords

Information; Perception; In vitro meat; Clean meat; Alternative proteins; Willingness to try; Animal welfare

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The study compared the effects of different informational claims on consumers' attitude towards cultured meat and found that environmental claims had a unifying effect, while human safety and animal welfare claims were divisive across sex and age groups. There was a positive correlation between favour, willingness to try, willingness to purchase, and willingness to substitute traditional meat with cultured meat, but these response variables seemed not to be interchangeable.
Cultured meat (CM) is a potential sustainable novel food. Consumers' attitude towards this product is currently under investigation but a direct comparison of the effect of different types of information on consumers' response to CM is lacking. This study aimed: 1. to compare the efficacy of different informative claims in improving attitude towards CM; 2. to verify the effect of previously studied variables on attitude towards CM. Four information types were compared (human safety; animal welfare; environmental impact; no additional information: control), each envisaging two additional claims ('Antibiotic-free' and 'Pathogen- and zoonosis-free' for human safety; 'No animal breeding' and 'No animal slaughtering' for animal welfare; '82-96% reduction of water consumption' and '99% reduction of soil usage' for environmental impact). The response variables were favour towards CM, willingness to try, willingness to purchase, and willingness to substitute traditional meat with CM. Data from 603 participants (61% females, 15-80 years old) randomly assigned to four blocks, each corresponding to one type of information, were analysed. Participants were uniform among blocks in terms of socio-demographic data, frequency of consumption of traditional meat, previous knowledge of CM, food neophobia, and disgust sensitivity. The type of information given to respondents improved favour and willingness to substitute compared to the control, without differences across blocks. The effects of the additional claims were comparable. Environmental claims unified respondents, while human safety and animal welfare claims were divisive for sex and age groups. Favour, willingness to try, willingness to purchase, and willingness to substitute were positively correlated (r 0.38-0.72) but the weak correlation between willingness to try and willingness to substitute indicates that being curious may not imply the modification of actual behaviour (traditional meat substitution). Response variables seemed not to be interchangeable. Females showed higher willingness to substitute CM to conventional meat if informed with claims related to human safety. Youngsters (under '30 years old), who are plausibly the real future target, showed higher favour towards CM if provided with information related to animal welfare and human safety. Production companies should carefully choose what additional information to provide, depending on the consumer target.

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