Integrating insect-derived ingredients into Western diets presents a sustainable protein alternative but encounters cultural resistance and spontaneous aversion. Assessing automatic reactions to insect-based foods remains challenging. Here, we psychometrically evaluated two indirect measures—the Brief Implicit Association Test (BIAT) and the Manikin Task—using visually similar insect-based and traditional burger stimuli differing only in branding. Across two studies (Study 1: recruited = 123, analyzed = 103; Study 2: recruited = 145, analyzed = 136), these tasks demonstrated acceptable-to-good reliability and captured distinct facets of spontaneous evaluative and approach-avoidance responses. While correlations between indirect and explicit measures were low, some associations aligned with theoretical expectations, indicating these tools assess automatic reactions beyond self-report. These findings provide a reliable toolkit for consumer research, facilitating a nuanced understanding of implicit attitudes toward insect-based foods. Both measures are suitable for online administration, enhancing their applicability in diverse research contexts.

Zogmaister, C., Fedeli, F., Albertoni, D., Alparone, F., Aquino, A., Talo, C., et al. (2026). Assessing spontaneous responses to insect-based foods using BIAT and manikin task. FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE, 142(August 2026) [10.1016/j.foodqual.2026.105914].

Assessing spontaneous responses to insect-based foods using BIAT and manikin task

Zogmaister C.;Fedeli F.;Mari S.
2026

Abstract

Integrating insect-derived ingredients into Western diets presents a sustainable protein alternative but encounters cultural resistance and spontaneous aversion. Assessing automatic reactions to insect-based foods remains challenging. Here, we psychometrically evaluated two indirect measures—the Brief Implicit Association Test (BIAT) and the Manikin Task—using visually similar insect-based and traditional burger stimuli differing only in branding. Across two studies (Study 1: recruited = 123, analyzed = 103; Study 2: recruited = 145, analyzed = 136), these tasks demonstrated acceptable-to-good reliability and captured distinct facets of spontaneous evaluative and approach-avoidance responses. While correlations between indirect and explicit measures were low, some associations aligned with theoretical expectations, indicating these tools assess automatic reactions beyond self-report. These findings provide a reliable toolkit for consumer research, facilitating a nuanced understanding of implicit attitudes toward insect-based foods. Both measures are suitable for online administration, enhancing their applicability in diverse research contexts.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Approach-avoidance tasks; Behavioral intentions; Implicit association test; Insect-based food; Manikin task; Spontaneous reactions; Sustainable food choices;
English
14-mar-2026
2026
142
August 2026
105914
open
Zogmaister, C., Fedeli, F., Albertoni, D., Alparone, F., Aquino, A., Talo, C., et al. (2026). Assessing spontaneous responses to insect-based foods using BIAT and manikin task. FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE, 142(August 2026) [10.1016/j.foodqual.2026.105914].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/606202
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