1. Consumer segmentation as a means to investigate emotional associations to meals.
- Author
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Piqueras-Fiszman, Betina and Jaeger, Sara R.
- Subjects
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CONSUMER research , *EMOTIONS , *MEAL as feed , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *COMPUTER surveys , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CUSTOMER satisfaction , *FAMILIES , *FOOD preferences , *INTERNET , *MARKETING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PLEASURE , *RESEARCH , *SURVEYS , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Consumers naturally associate emotions to meal occasions and understanding these can advance knowledge of food-related behaviours and attitudes. The present study used an online survey to investigate the emotional associations that people have with recalled meals: 'memorable' (MM) and 'routine' evening (RM). Heterogeneity in the studied consumer population (UK adults, n = 576 and 571, respectively) was accounted for using a data-driven approach to establish emotion-based segments. Two groups of people were identified with very different emotional response patterns to recalled meals. For 'memorable' and 'routine' meals the majority of people (Cluster 1) held strong positive and weak negative emotional associations. In Cluster 2, positive emotions remained more strongly associated than negative emotions, but much less so. In accordance with findings based on other response variables (e.g., preference, attitudes), psychographic variables accounted better for the heterogeneity found in the emotion associations than socio-demographic variables. Participants' level of meal engagement and difficulty in describing feelings (DDF scale) were the two most important predictors of cluster membership. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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