Publication | Open Access
A Comparison of Attitudes Toward Food and Biotechnology in the U.S., Japan, and Italy
16
Citations
1
References
2012
Year
NutritionU.s. ConsumerAgricultural EconomicsConsumer ResearchFood CharacteristicsUnited StatesFood ChoiceFood MarketingConsumer BehaviorFood RegulationAttitudes Toward FoodPublic HealthFood ConsumptionFood InnovationFood PolicyHealth SciencesFood QualityMarketingFood AuthenticityFood SafetyConsumer Attitude
This research compares the attitudes of consumers in the United States, Italy and Japan toward food characteristics. The U.S. and Japanese consumers had relatively positive attitudes toward genetically modified food, while the Italian consumer had relatively negative attitudes. The Italian consumer was least likely to be familiar with genetically modified food. They rated organic higher than the U.S. consumer and they appeared to understand the meaning of the term organic better than the U.S. consumers. The U.S. and Japanese consumers were more concerned with freshness and value while the Italian consumers were concerned about the environment and local food.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1