Monday, January 20, 2025
spot_img

People judge chocolate by its cover: Study

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

Researchers have found that people judge and make choices about chocolates by their wrapper and packaging design.
And what’s more? People tend to express a strong emotional association with the cover of the chocolate than with its taste.
The study concluded that while the taste is the predominant factor in determining subsequent purchases, perception of taste is influenced by emotions evoked by packaging.
“There’s a difference in how consumers perceive intrinsic product cues — like flavour, aroma, and texture — which are associated with sensory and perceptual systems, and how they perceive external cues — like packaging materials, information, brand name, and price — which are associated with cognitive and psychological mechanisms,” explained co-lead investigator Frank R Dunshea, PhD, School of Agriculture and Food, VIC, Australia.
“The information provided via packaging can influence customers’ expectations and affect their emotional response when their sensory experience confirms or doesn’t confirm their initial impression,” continued Dunshea in the study published in the journal, ‘Heliyon.’
For the study, seventy-five participants (aged 25-55 years old, 59 per cent female) were asked to evaluate chocolates under three conditions: a blind taste test of chocolate, packaging concepts only, and chocolate plus packaging.
The same chocolate was wrapped in six different packaging designs representing bold, fun, every day, special, healthy, and premium concepts. At each step, participants were asked to associate the samples with a lexicon of emotion-based terms.
How much participants liked the taste of the chocolates was affected by their expectations based on the different wrapper designs, especially when expectations created by packaging were not met. Participants selected stronger emotional words to describe the packaging than they did when describing when they blindly tasted the chocolate.
The investigators found that there was a moderate positive correlation between liking the packaging and the taste of the chocolate when it was wrapped in packaging described with positive terms such as happy, healthy, fun, bright, relaxing, peace, achievement, togetherness, balance, excitement, and friendship.
Participants’ association of positive emotions with the packaging, therefore, had a direct influence on the acceptability of the chocolate. (ANI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Saif Ali Khan attack case: How Mumbai Police tracked down Bangladeshi attacker

Mumbai, Jan 19: Bangladeshi national, Shariful Islam Shehzad had illegally entered India and was living under the false...

Beant Singh assassination case: SC to hear on Monday Rajoana’s plea on commutation of death penalty

New Delhi, Jan 19 : The Supreme Court is slated to hear on Monday a writ petition filed...

One more arrested for trafficking Keralites to Russian Army

Thiruvananthapuram, Jan 19 : One more person has been arrested in connection with trafficking Keralites to the Russian...

EPFO simplifies process for funds transfer, correcting personal details

New Delhi, Jan 19 : The Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has introduced major changes to simplify key...