Failing to pay heed to health warnings in a food-associated environment

susan's picture

People often fail to adhere to food-related health information. Increasing evidence suggests that environmental stimuli interfere with good intentions by triggering choices relatively automatically. Using a Pavlovian-instrumental transfer (PIT) task, we examined whether food-associated stimuli reduce health warnings’ effectiveness. We expected that people adhere to health warnings in the absence, but not presence, of food-associated stimuli. In addition, we examined timing effects, i.e., whether health warnings are more effective when they are given prior to associative learning rather than afterwards.

Original Source

Main Topic: 
Name of the Journal: 
Mark Content Private(Internal): 
Email Alert: 
616e626
12
Publication Date: 
01/01/2018