69 results on '"Gustafson, Christopher R."'
Search Results
52. Retail-based healthy food point-of-decision prompts (PDPs) increase healthy food choices in a rural, low-income, minority community
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Gustafson, Christopher R., primary, Kent, Rachel, additional, and Prate, Michael R., additional
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- 2018
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53. Label Position and it Impacts on WTP for Products Containing GMO
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Gautam, Ruskin, Gustafson, Christopher R., and Brooks, Kathleen R.
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Marketing ,FOS: Economics and business ,Agricultural and Food Policy ,Institutional and Behavioral Economics - Published
- 2017
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54. Effects of Information Framing on Smallholder Irrigation Farmers’ Willingness to Pay for Groundwater Protection: The Case of Vea Irrigation Scheme in Ghana
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Alhassan, Mustapha, Gustafson, Christopher R., and Schoengold, Karina
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Environmental Economics and Policy ,Resource/Energy Economics and Policy ,Land Economics/Use - Published
- 2017
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55. Retail Food Choice Point-of-decision Prompt
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Gustafson, Christopher R., primary
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- 2018
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56. BE Choice Experiment Healthy Food Labeling
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Gustafson, Christopher R., primary
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- 2018
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57. The Medical Cost Savings of Changes to Healthier US Diets
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Rehkamp, Sarah, primary, Azzam, Azzeddine, additional, and Gustafson, Christopher R., additional
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- 2017
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58. US Dietary Shifts and the Associated CO2 Emissions from Farm Energy Use
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Rehkamp, Sarah, primary, Azzam, Azzeddine, additional, and Gustafson, Christopher R., additional
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- 2017
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59. The Cost Savings of Changes to Healthier Diets in the U.S
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Rehkamp, Sarah, Azzam, Azzeddine, and Gustafson, Christopher R.
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diet, body mass index, health cost, Agricultural and Food Policy, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on sustainable consumption by using scenario analysis to evaluate the health costs of the U.S. diet relative to the French, Japanese, Mediterranean, and Nordic diets, identified in the literature as healthier diets. As a first step in estimating health costs, a pooled cross-section time-series dataset is used to find the association between BMI and five countries, representative of the five diets. The costs are assessed using estimates in the literature of the health costs associated with an increase in BMI. All four alternative diets result in reduced BMI and, hence, reduced health costs compared to the United States. The Mediterranean diet is the least costly when dietary compositions shifts, but total caloric consumption is held constant at the U.S. level. However, the Japanese diet is the least costly when both dietary composition and total caloric consumption are allowed to shift to the respective level in each diet.
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- 2015
60. School attendance and the perceived value of formal education: Evidence from Tanzania
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Gustafson, Christopher R.
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Education, Tanzania, Pastoralism, International Development, Labor and Human Capital - Abstract
The benefits of universal primary education (UPE)—ranging from increased personal wellbeing to socially important outcomes such as lower population growth and improved maternal and child health—are widely documented, and donor organizations have invested significant amounts of money to reduce barriers to education. However, there are still many children—and girls, in particular—who do not attend school. Countries in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) have not attained rates of primary school attendance as high as countries in other parts of the developing world. Authors of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) listed UPE in SSA as a core need for achievement of the MDGs. Economic models of educational choice have provided an important framework to think about determinants of school attendance (Becker, 1975). These determinants include benefits, such as higher wages, and costs—both the direct costs households incur in paying school attendance fees, and indirect costs to the household, such as lost labor (e.g. Glick, 2008; Handa, 2002). Pairing these theoretical models with data on school attendance has yielded important insights into decision-making. These insights have been used to guide policy (Fiszbein, Schady, & Ferreira, 2009), and school attendance rates in SSA have increased significantly over the past thirty years (Lincove, 2015). However, as attendance rates have increased, the children who are not in school tend to live increasingly in marginalized, rural communities that do not have the data necessary to understand parents’ schooling choices with the standard model. In many of these communities formal labor markets are thin or non-existent, requiring students to migrate to urban areas to take advantage of the financial benefits of increased education. Additionally, these communities are much less likely to have a history of formal education, reducing opportunities for parents to learn about benefits of education through experience or social networks. Gender disparities in school attendance are frequently also higher than in the general population, and may be due to cultural beliefs or household reliance on female labor. Cumulatively, these factors may engender more inter-household heterogeneity in the conceptualization of the benefits of education. To address gaps in the evidence, this paper introduces data on household leaders’ ideas about the positive or negative effects of education into a model of schooling choice. We collected data on current education decisions and expenditures for children (both children attending and not attending school), educational levels achieved for adults, and male and female assets and income from 196 households of three sedentarized pastoralist and agro-pastoralist tribes living in rural south-central Tanzania. Further, we gathered data separately from male and female heads of household on perceptions of the effects of education for male and female children and on whom in the household or community makes decisions about school attendance for the household’s children. We also have, among other variables, household-level data such as distance to water sources, agricultural and livestock holdings (a factor in the household’s opportunity cost of sending their children to school), and distance to school. There is marked variation in education choices among the tribes, ranging from a low of 25 percent of school-aged children (with 15 percent of them female) attending school to over half of school-aged children (and 49 percent of them female) attending school at the high end. Interestingly, the tribe investing the most in schooling is also on average the poorest in terms of livestock and agricultural holdings, which comprise the bulk of these communities’ wealth. Household leaders’ perceptions of the effects of education encompass a range of benefits and costs. Among these are beliefs that would fit with the motivations commonly assumed to be drivers of education—the ability to get a job, earn wages or a salary, or improve their (and their family’s) material standards of living. However, other households viewed education as a safeguard against exploitation (more frequently listed for females than males), as a way to help their families adapt to a changing environment, as a public good for the entire community, or as a benefit to the students’ abilities to manage the household’s livestock. A significant minority of households expressed ambivalence (“there is no value to education”) or opposition, citing the potential for moral decay, to education; non-positive sentiments tended to be expressed more frequently about educating female than male children. Using data on household composition, school attendance, and education perceptions, we estimate models of whether a household chooses to educate any students, and of the number of students currently being educated, for the entire sample and for males and females separately. Our findings confirm previous results from work on education, while adding new insights. The education levels of household leaders—and of mothers in particular—are an important determinant of children’s schooling. Households in which fathers alone make the schooling decisions educate fewer females and fewer children in general. More female income is associated with higher school attendance. New insights stem from perceptions of education. We find that perceptions of the educational benefits are important in understanding the schooling decisions. Interestingly, however, there are differential effects among the benefits. Households indicating that the opportunity to get a job and earn wages is an important benefit of education are more likely to educate children than households that do not view this as a benefit, while households stating that education is important for children to become better herders are less likely to educate children than those who think this is not an important effect. The novel integration of decision-makers’ perceptions of the benefits of education into the analysis of education choice yields interesting findings. While some of these findings support the standard assumptions of human capital accumulation models and corroborate previous findings, there are new insights into households’ educational choices that will stimulate healthy discussion about the nature of education in marginalized populations, and implications for the achievement of MDGs in SSA. References Becker, G. (1975). Human Capital. New York: National Bureau of Economic Research. Fiszbein, A., Schady, N.R., & Ferreira, F.H. (2009). Conditional cash transfers: Reducing present and future poverty. Washington, DC: World Bank Publications Glick, P. (2008). What policies will reduce gender schooling gaps in developing countries: Evidence and interpretation. World Development, 36(9), 1623–1646. Handa, S. (2002). Raising primary school enrolment in developing countries: The relative importance of supply and demand. Journal of Development Economics, 69, 103–128. Lincove, J.A. (2015). Improving identification of demand-side obstacles to schooling: Findings from revealed and state preference models in two SSA countries. World Development 66: 69-83
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- 2015
61. Consumer sorting and hedonic valuation of wine attributes: exploiting data from a field experiment
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Gustafson, Christopher R., primary, Lybbert, Travis J., additional, and Sumner, Daniel A., additional
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- 2016
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62. Consumer Characteristics, Identification, and Hedonic Valuation of Wine Attributes: Exploiting Data from a Field Experiment
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Gustafson, Christopher R., Lybbert, Travis J., and Sumner, Daniel A.
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Agribusiness, Consumer/Household Economics - Abstract
This paper uses a novel experimental approach to measure consumer willingness to pay for wine attributes in a hedonic framework. The research design allows us to deal with identification issues resulting from the interaction of demand and supply and to examine the effect of supply-side influences in price data. We employ information from observed wine choices and individual fixed effects to account for consumer heterogeneity and sorting. The effects of controlling for supply and addressing sorting and heterogeneity yield estimates of WTP for wine attributes markedly different than those found by past studies. The results demonstrate that consumer sorting is an important force in product markets and that consumer preferences for unobserved attributes drive valuation differences significantly. For instance, consumers in our sample display greater strength of preference over wine varieties than they do for appellations. It is therefore necessary to interpret results carefully when using valuation data that has been generated in controlled conditions.
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- 2011
63. Combining Consumer Valuation Research with Sensory Science Techniques: A Laboratory Experiment
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Gustafson, Christopher R., Lybbert, Travis J., and Sumner, Daniel A.
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Marketing ,FOS: Economics and business ,Hedonic Pricing ,Sensory Analysis ,Experimental Economics ,Consumer Valuation ,Demand and Price Analysis ,Willingness to Pay ,Wine ,Research Methods/ Statistical Methods ,WTP ,Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety - Abstract
In this research, we integrated an experimental auction with sensory science techniques—namely, trained sensory panels used to analyze the sensory attributes of wines—to examine the effects of objective and sensory information in the market for California-produced Cabernet Sauvignons. The experiment permitted observation of consumer valuation for sensory attributes of wine, appellations, expert ratings, and wineries. Participants submitted bids each time they received new information about the wines. The balanced experimental design permits evaluation of the effects of consumer characteristics on attribute valuation. We had 236 people participate in the research, which consisted of nine rounds of bidding and one round of hedonic liking scores. Rounds 5-9 repeated the structure of information released in rounds 1-4, but added sensory information, yielding 472 observations for each type of information (e.g. appellation, expert rating, winery). We obtain a total of 8496 valuations, or bids and 944 hedonic “liking” ratings, as well as demographic information, wine consumption data, and a wine knowledge score for each consumer. The results of the research agree with many of the previously held notions about valuation of wine by consumers. Participants value Cabernet Sauvignons from Napa Valley and Sonoma County and their sub-appellations more than wines labeled with the California appellation. Bids for wines rated by experts such as the Wine Advocate (Robert Parker) or Wine Spectator increased as the experts’ ratings increased. However, we also find that consumer characteristics are very important in explaining WTP for wine attributes. The contributions of prestigious appellations to the value of Cabernet Sauvignons depended on consumer characteristics. Willingness to pay was highly correlated with sensory evaluation, but even after tasting the wine, appellation and expert ratings still mattered for WTP. Overall, the research describes a significant amount of heterogeneity in the preferences for sensory characteristics of wine, and that individual characteristics systematically explain many of the differences in valuation of wine attributes.
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- 2011
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64. The Role of Knowledge in Choice, Valuation, and Outcomes for Multi-Attribute Goods
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Gustafson, Christopher R., primary
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- 2015
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65. Estimating the Effect of the Order of Information Revelation on Purchases: Expectations and Subjective Experience in the Wine Market
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Gustafson, Christopher R.
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Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Marketing - Abstract
Recent research on consumer behavior has indicated that, contrary to most models in economics, information can affect consumers' subjective experience with a good. When consumers receive information about the quality of a good before experiencing the sensory characteristics of the good, the consumers' stated preferences for the goods have been affected. However, a study has yet to examine whether this affects consumers' purchasing decisions, or is limited to stated preference. This field experiment looks at the release of appellation information prior to and after tasting of wine, and uses sales of the two wines tasted as a dependent variable.
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- 2008
66. Discrete Choice Experiment on Financial Incentives for Engaging Young Adults in Vaping Cessation Programs.
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Michaud, Tzeyu L., Samson, Kaeli, Chang, Su-Hsin, Gustafson, Christopher R., and Dai, Hongying Daisy
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AbstractIntroductionMethodsResultsConclusionContingency management involves rewarding individuals based on objective evidence of behavioral changes. This study explores preferences for financial incentives in vaping cessation programs.A discrete choice experiment (DCE) was conducted among young adult current e-cigarette users aged 19-29. DCE attributes (and levels) included reward amount ($100, $300), reward schedule (consistent value, escalating value), reward procedure (gain-framed, loss-framed), vaping education modules (yes, no), text messaging support (yes, no), and cost ($30, $100). Participants were randomized into one of the four blocks, each containing four choice sets. Each choice set presented two hypothetical vaping cessation programs. Choice data (n × choice sets × alternative programs = 154 × 4 × 2 = 1,232 observations) were analyzed using generalized estimation equation models.Participants showed a preference for vaping cessation programs offering a higher reward amount (odds ratio [OR] = 11.5; 95% CI,7.0-19.2), gain-framed rewards for sustained abstinence (OR = 1.4; 95% CI,1.0-1.8), text messaging support (OR = 1.9; 95% CI,1.4-2.5), and a lower program cost (OR = 2.6; 95% CI,1.8-3.8). Interaction tests showed significant effects of the rewards procedure among daily e-cigarette users (adjusted OR [AOR] = 2.1; 95% CI,1.3-3.5), but not some-day users; and among those with no quit attempts in the past six months (AOR = 2.7; 95% CI,1.5-4.7), but not those with previous quit attempts. Female participants preferred text messaging support (AOR = 3.6; 95% CI,2.3-5.4), whereas male participants did not show this preference.A multifaceted vaping cessation intervention augmented with financial incentives might improve participation and engagement among young adults. Future studies should investigate how these attributes can enhance program reach and vaping abstinence outcomes in real-world settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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67. Exercise and the Timing of Snack Choice: Healthy Snack Choice is Reduced in the Post-Exercise State.
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Gustafson, Christopher R., Rakhmatullaeva, Nigina, Beckford, Safiya E., Ammachathram, Ajai, Cristobal, Alexander, and Koehler, Karsten
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Acute exercise can induce either a compensatory increase in food intake or a reduction in food intake, which results from appetite suppression in the post-exercise state. The timing of food choice—choosing for immediate or later consumption—has been found to influence the healthfulness of foods consumed. To examine both of these effects, we tested in our study whether the timing of food choice interacts with exposure to exercise to impact food choices such that choices would differ when made prior to or following an exercise bout. Visitors to a university recreational center were equipped with an accelerometer prior to their habitual workout regime, masking the true study purpose. As a reward, participants were presented with a snack for consumption after workout completion. Participants made their snack choice from either an apple or chocolate brownie after being pseudo-randomly assigned to choose prior to ("before") or following workout completion ("after"). Complete data were available for 256 participants (54.7% male, 22.1 ± 3.1 years, 24.7 ± 3.7 kg/m
2 ) who exercised 65.3 ± 22.5 min/session. When compared with "before," the choice of an apple decreased (73.7% vs. 54.6%) and the choices of brownie (13.9% vs. 20.2%) or no snack (12.4% vs. 25.2%) increased in the "after" condition (χ2 = 26.578, p < 0.001). Our results provide support for both compensatory eating and exercise-induced anorexia. More importantly, our findings suggest that the choice of food for post-exercise consumption can be altered through a simple behavioral intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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68. School Fruit and Vegetable Production Changes Following a Student Participatory Marketing Project.
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Abbey, Bryce M., Heelan, Kate A., and Gustafson, Christopher R.
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Research Objectives: Federal guidelines require schools participating in school meal programs to complete food production records. Production records demonstrate how meals contribute to the requirements of food components, food items or menu items. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how student involvement in the design of fruit and vegetable (F&V) promotional materials in schools influences production of F&V on school salad bars. Methods: Four elementary schools participated, including one control school (CON). Students at an Involvement and Marketing (I&M) school and Involvement Only (IO) school designed materials to promote F&V. Materials from the I&M school were subsequently posted in the I&M and a Marketing Only (MO) school. F&V production was determined by the number of servings prepared on salad bars during lunch periods. Production records data were recorded by school cafeteria staff on a standardized template and were collected four times throughout the year. Production records were compared between schools and time periods to determine changes in production and production waste during the student participatory marketing of F&V. Results: Data on servings prepared per person served showed an increase in all intervention schools during the intervention period compared to baseline and a decrease in the control school (CON = -5.0%, IO = 3.6%, MO = 0.3% and I&M = 4.5%). During a follow-up period, all schools had an increase in production (CON = 12.0%, IO = 12.2%, MO = 20.5% and I&M = 6.0%). Application of Results: A focus on F&V marketing in schools shows an increase in provided amounts of F&V, which may lead to more opportunities for F&V consumption by students. Production records are used by school districts and states to analyze the nutritional content of meals served and to plan for future purchases. However, the lack of accurate production waste data may make the data unusable to examine changes in F&V served and possibly consumed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
69. US Dietary Shifts and the Associated CO2 Emissions from Farm Energy Use.
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Rehkamp, Sarah, Azzam, Azzeddine, and Gustafson, Christopher R.
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DIETARY fiber , *CARBON dioxide mitigation - Abstract
In this article, we explore the relationship between dietary composition, on-farm energy use, and CO2 emissions. Then, we estimate the cost of these emissions for the US diet relative to a Japanese, Greek, French, or Finnish diet. To carry out the analysis, we use four main data inputs: the proportions of per-capita caloric intake from plantbased and animal-based products for each diet, the products' energy efficiencies, CO2 emissions per calorie, and total calories. We consider two scenarios: one in which dietary composition varies and the second in which both composition and calories vary with the respective levels in each diet. Our findings suggest that a shift to the Greek diet reduces CO2 emissions by 5.5 percent when daily caloric intake stays at the US level. This result suggests that the types of animal products being consumed matter, not just the amount, since the Greek diet has a higher proportion of animal-based products than the Japanese diet. When US daily caloric intake varies, the Japanese diet is the least polluting and reduces CO2 emissions by 29.2 percent due to the relatively fewer calories consumed in the Japanese diet. Alternatively, the French and the Finnish diets have a higher share of animal-based products and produce more CO2 emissions in both dietary scenarios. The social cost of the CO2 emissions associated with producing the current US diet ranges from $4.51 to $90.27 per capita, or 0.48 percent to 9.53 percent of farm cash receipts. Switching to either the Greek or the Japanese diet would result in lower costs in both of the scenarios we consider whereas the French and Finnish diets increase the social cost of CO2 emissions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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