Online food advertisements and the role of emotions in adolescents’ food choices

Author:

Vecchi Martina1ORCID,Fan Linlin2,Myruski Sarah3,Yang Wei4,Keller Kathleen L.5,Nayga Rodolfo M.46

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, School of Economic, Social and Political Sciences University of Southampton Southampton United Kingdom

2. Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology & Education Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

3. Department of Psychology Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

4. Department of Agricultural Economics Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

5. Department of Nutritional Sciences Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

6. Department of Food and Resource Economics Korea University Seoul South Korea

Abstract

AbstractAdolescence is a critical period for future health outcomes. Food habits and cognitive development are underway, and it is a period of heightened sensitivity to external influences and emotional shifts. We experimentally test the individual and combined influence of food advertisements and emotional primes (i.e., positive, negative, neutral) on adolescent food choices. Participants completed a food choice task selecting five snacks out of twenty healthy and unhealthy options in an online experiment. Prior to the food choice, we randomized whether adolescents were exposed to unhealthy food or non‐food online advertisements. To induce experimental variation in adolescents’ emotions, they were assigned to watch two, two‐minute film clips validated to elicit the targeted emotion. The online food advertisement did not significantly impact food choices, except that Black and Hispanic groups selected a higher share of calories from unhealthy foods. Participants in a negative emotional state selected more unhealthy sweet snacks. Finally, we find only weak evidence that a positive emotional state amplified the impact of food advertisements on the nutritional quality of food selection. Together, results suggest that while a negative emotional state drives food choices, this pattern occurs independently from food advertisement exposure.

Funder

Social Science Research Institute, Pennsylvania State University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Agronomy and Crop Science,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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