How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

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How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark. / Hémar-Nicolas, Valerie; Hapsari, Hanum Putri; Angka, Stephanie; Olsen, Annemarie.

In: Food Quality and Preference, Vol. 87, 104031, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hémar-Nicolas, V, Hapsari, HP, Angka, S & Olsen, A 2021, 'How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark', Food Quality and Preference, vol. 87, 104031. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104031

APA

Hémar-Nicolas, V., Hapsari, H. P., Angka, S., & Olsen, A. (2021). How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark. Food Quality and Preference, 87, [104031]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104031

Vancouver

Hémar-Nicolas V, Hapsari HP, Angka S, Olsen A. How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark. Food Quality and Preference. 2021;87. 104031. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104031

Author

Hémar-Nicolas, Valerie ; Hapsari, Hanum Putri ; Angka, Stephanie ; Olsen, Annemarie. / How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark. In: Food Quality and Preference. 2021 ; Vol. 87.

Bibtex

@article{86e7ddaa93d84651ab98a5b46077beb8,
title = "How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark",
abstract = "While the use of cartoon characters is recurrently blamed for encouraging unhealthy food habits in children, these techniques conversely appear to be highly relevant to promote healthy foods, specifically fruits and vegetables. In this context, our cross-cultural research project aims to explore to what extent a cartoon character associated with health- or taste-related claims on a snack vegetable influences 8- to 11-year-old children's evaluation of cucumber packaging and their willingness to consume this snack. The experiment is conducted with 162 Indonesian and 101 Danish children. Its design is 3 within-groups for the character (congruent character versus incongruent character versus no character) × 3 between-groups for the claim (healthy versus tasty versus no claim) × 2 between-groups for the country (Denmark versus Indonesia). The results show that an on-package character increases Danish children's packaging evaluation and that this effect is stronger when the character is perceptually congruent with cucumber (colour and shape). In contrast, no character has a direct effect on their willingness to eat cucumber, to request it from their parents, and to recommend it to a friend. Additionally, neither taste nor health claims influence children's packaging evaluation and intention. Regarding Indonesian children, their responses to packages are often more favourable than Danish children, but do not vary according to the character-claim combinations, except when they were asked to express their preference through a forced choice task. These cultural differences highlight the methodological challenges involved in cross-cultural studies.",
keywords = "Cartoon Character, Children, Claim, Cross-cultural studies, Packaging, Vegetables",
author = "Valerie H{\'e}mar-Nicolas and Hapsari, {Hanum Putri} and Stephanie Angka and Annemarie Olsen",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104031",
language = "English",
volume = "87",
journal = "Food Quality and Preference",
issn = "0950-3293",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How cartoon characters and claims influence children's attitude towards a snack vegetable – An explorative cross-cultural comparison between Indonesia and Denmark

AU - Hémar-Nicolas, Valerie

AU - Hapsari, Hanum Putri

AU - Angka, Stephanie

AU - Olsen, Annemarie

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - While the use of cartoon characters is recurrently blamed for encouraging unhealthy food habits in children, these techniques conversely appear to be highly relevant to promote healthy foods, specifically fruits and vegetables. In this context, our cross-cultural research project aims to explore to what extent a cartoon character associated with health- or taste-related claims on a snack vegetable influences 8- to 11-year-old children's evaluation of cucumber packaging and their willingness to consume this snack. The experiment is conducted with 162 Indonesian and 101 Danish children. Its design is 3 within-groups for the character (congruent character versus incongruent character versus no character) × 3 between-groups for the claim (healthy versus tasty versus no claim) × 2 between-groups for the country (Denmark versus Indonesia). The results show that an on-package character increases Danish children's packaging evaluation and that this effect is stronger when the character is perceptually congruent with cucumber (colour and shape). In contrast, no character has a direct effect on their willingness to eat cucumber, to request it from their parents, and to recommend it to a friend. Additionally, neither taste nor health claims influence children's packaging evaluation and intention. Regarding Indonesian children, their responses to packages are often more favourable than Danish children, but do not vary according to the character-claim combinations, except when they were asked to express their preference through a forced choice task. These cultural differences highlight the methodological challenges involved in cross-cultural studies.

AB - While the use of cartoon characters is recurrently blamed for encouraging unhealthy food habits in children, these techniques conversely appear to be highly relevant to promote healthy foods, specifically fruits and vegetables. In this context, our cross-cultural research project aims to explore to what extent a cartoon character associated with health- or taste-related claims on a snack vegetable influences 8- to 11-year-old children's evaluation of cucumber packaging and their willingness to consume this snack. The experiment is conducted with 162 Indonesian and 101 Danish children. Its design is 3 within-groups for the character (congruent character versus incongruent character versus no character) × 3 between-groups for the claim (healthy versus tasty versus no claim) × 2 between-groups for the country (Denmark versus Indonesia). The results show that an on-package character increases Danish children's packaging evaluation and that this effect is stronger when the character is perceptually congruent with cucumber (colour and shape). In contrast, no character has a direct effect on their willingness to eat cucumber, to request it from their parents, and to recommend it to a friend. Additionally, neither taste nor health claims influence children's packaging evaluation and intention. Regarding Indonesian children, their responses to packages are often more favourable than Danish children, but do not vary according to the character-claim combinations, except when they were asked to express their preference through a forced choice task. These cultural differences highlight the methodological challenges involved in cross-cultural studies.

KW - Cartoon Character

KW - Children

KW - Claim

KW - Cross-cultural studies

KW - Packaging

KW - Vegetables

U2 - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104031

DO - 10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104031

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85089341104

VL - 87

JO - Food Quality and Preference

JF - Food Quality and Preference

SN - 0950-3293

M1 - 104031

ER -

ID: 248023634