Publication | Closed Access
Macho Nachos
35
Citations
59
References
2015
Year
Food ChoiceGendered PerceptionBehavioral SciencesGender IdentityFood PackagingSchema Congruity EffectGender StudiesSocial PsychologyBiasManagementConsumer ResearchConsumer AttitudeConsumer BehaviorGender StereotypeMarketingGender Schema CongruentHealth Sciences
Abstract. The present studies examine how culturally held stereotypes about gender (that women eat more healthfully than men) implicitly influence food preferences. In Study 1, priming masculinity led both male and female participants to prefer unhealthy foods, while priming femininity led both male and female participants to prefer healthy foods. Study 2 extended these effects to gendered food packaging. When the packaging and healthiness of the food were gender schema congruent (i.e., feminine packaging for a healthy food, masculine packaging for an unhealthy food) both male and female participants rated the product as more attractive, said that they would be more likely to purchase it, and even rated it as tasting better compared to when the product was stereotype incongruent. In Study 3, packaging that explicitly appealed to gender stereotypes (“The muffin for real men”) reversed the schema congruity effect, but only among participants who scored high in psychological reactance.
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