4.7 Article

Emoji for Food and Beverage Research: Pleasure, Arousal and Dominance Meanings and Appropriateness for Use

Journal

FOODS
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods10112880

Keywords

emoji; emotions; pleasure; arousal; dominance; PAD model; consumer research

Funding

  1. New Zealand Ministry for Business, Innovation and Employment
  2. New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited

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Emoji have significant potential for emotion research and are suitable for cross-cultural studies. In the context of food and beverage, certain emoji like the face savoring food and clapping hands were found to be highly appropriate, while others like zzz and oncoming fist were considered the least suitable for use.
Emoji have been argued to have considerable potential for emotion research but are struggling with uptake in part because knowledge about their meaning is lacking. The present research included 24 emoji (14 facial, 10 non-facial) which were characterized using the PAD model (Pleasure-Arousal-Dominance) of human affect by 165 consumers in New Zealand and 861 consumers in the UK. The results from the two countries were remarkably similar and contributed further evidence that emoji are suitable for cross-cultural research. While significant differences between the emoji were established for each of the PAD dimensions, the mean scores differed most on the Pleasure dimension (positive to negative), then on the Arousal dimension (activated to deactivated), and lastly on the Dominance dimension (dominance to submissive). The research also directly measured the perceived appropriateness of the 24 emoji for use with foods and beverages. The emoji face savoring food, clapping hands and party popper were in the top-5 for the highest appropriateness in food and beverage context for both studies, as was a strong negative expression linked to rejection (Study 1: face vomiting; Study 2: nauseated face). On the other hand, zzz and oncoming fist were considered as the least appropriate to be used in a food and beverage context in both studies. Again, the results from the UK and NZ were in good agreement and identified similar groups of emoji as most and least suitable for food-related consumer research.

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