Increasing Vegetable Intake by Emphasizing Tasty and Enjoyable Attributes: A Randomized Controlled Multisite Intervention for Taste-Focused Labeling

Author:

Turnwald Bradley P.1ORCID,Bertoldo Jaclyn D.2,Perry Margaret A.1,Policastro Peggy3,Timmons Maureen4,Bosso Christopher5,Connors Priscilla6,Valgenti Robert T.7,Pine Lindsey8,Challamel Ghislaine9,Gardner Christopher D.10,Crum Alia J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Stanford University

2. Residential and Dining Enterprises, Stanford University

3. Institute for Food, Nutrition, and Health, Rutgers University

4. Dining Services, Northeastern University

5. School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs, Northeastern University

6. Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management, University of North Texas

7. Department of Philosophy, Lebanon Valley College

8. USC Hospitality, University of Southern California

9. Menus of Change University Research Collaborative

10. Stanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford University

Abstract

Healthy food labels tout health benefits, yet most people prioritize tastiness in the moment of food choice. In a preregistered intervention, we tested whether taste-focused labels compared with health-focused labels increased vegetable intake at five university dining halls throughout the United States. Across 137,842 diner decisions, 185 days, and 24 vegetable types, taste-focused labels increased vegetable selection by 29% compared with health-focused labels and by 14% compared with basic labels. Vegetable consumption also increased. Supplementary studies further probed the mediators, moderators, and boundaries of these effects. Increased expectations of a positive taste experience mediated the effect of taste-focused labels on vegetable selection. Moderation tests revealed greater effects in settings that served tastier vegetable recipes. Taste-focused labels outperformed labels that merely contained positive words, fancy words, or lists of ingredients. Together, these studies show that emphasizing tasty and enjoyable attributes increases vegetable intake in real-world settings in which vegetables compete with less healthy options.

Funder

robert wood johnson foundation

National Science Foundation

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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