Title of article
The “organic” path to obesity? Organic claims influence calorie judgments and exercise recommendations
Author/Authors
Jonathon P. Schuldt and Norbert Schwarz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
7
From page
144
To page
150
Abstract
Labeling a food as “organic” entails a claim about its production but is silent on its calorie content. Nevertheless, people infer that organic cookies are lower in calories and can be eaten more often than conventional cookies (Study 1). These inferences are observed even when the nutrition label conveys identical calorie content and are more pronounced among perceivers high on pro-environmentalism. Moreover, when evaluating a person with a weight-loss goal, forgoing exercise is deemed more acceptable when the person has just chosen organic rather than conventional dessert (Study 2). These results reflect an “organic/natural”-“healthy” association that is capable of biasing everyday judgments about diet and exercise.
Journal title
Judgment and Decision Making
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Judgment and Decision Making
Record number
657461
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