De Magistris, Tiziana  
Nutrition, Choice and Health-Related Claims 
 -  MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute  2020 
 - 1 electronic resource (362 p.) 
  Open Access 
  This book presents different articles focused on the role of nutritional properties and/or health-related claims on choice preferences, choice behavior, healthy eating/healthy diet, and the willingness to pay for certain foods. 
 Creative Commons 
 English 
ISBN:  books978-3-03928-649-2 9783039286485 9783039286492 
Standard No.:  10.3390/books978-3-03928-649-2  doi 
Subjects--Index Terms:  allergen n/a consumer home-test cereal grains non-communicable diseases health information trans-fatty acids health halo Aragón nutritional knowledge WTP Food Neophobia Scale (FNS) qualitative choice architecture plant extract organic consumer choices loglinear analysis exposure time purchase intentions food labelling functional ingredients greenhouse gas emissions non-communicable disease functional food food labels dietary fiber dining environment food choices changes in quality random forest local labeling segmentation cluster analysis nudging policy green tea United Kingdom health menu perceptions nutritional labels consumer research vitamins quantile regression nutritional claims information market success red wine qualified health claim alcohol content cross-cultural comparison health attitudes environmental information health consciousness nutrition claims health claim choice experiment organic dried strawberries emotional eating Brexit claim food choice pastries nutrition claim a discrete choice-based experiment trade-offs campus sustainability food neophobia nutrition lycopene nutrient labels yoghurt claims ultra-processed food products health claims willingness to pay changes in prices binary logistic regression new product development carrier foods consumer behavior college students focus groups clean labels consumer heterogeneity consumer organic consumer choice biscuits packaging label portion size older adult visual appraisal willingness to purchase experimental auction cancer consumer preferences