Publication: Guiltless gluttony: the asymmetric effect of size labels on size perceptions and consumption
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Krishna, Aradhna
Publication Date
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Type
Embargo Status
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Alternative Title
Abstract
Size labels adopted by food vendors can have a major impact on size judgments and consumption. In forming size judgments, consumers integrate the actual size information from the stimuli with the semantic cue from the size label. Size labels influence not only size perception and actual consumption, they also affect perceived consumption. Size labels can also result in relative perceived size reversals, so that consumers deem a smaller package to be bigger than a larger one. Further, consumers are more likely to believe a label that professes an item to be smaller (vs. larger) in the size range associated with that item. This asymmetric effect of size labels can result in larger consumption without the consumer even being aware of it ("guiltless gluttony").
Source
Publisher
Oxford Univ Press Inc
Subject
Business
Citation
Has Part
Source
Journal of Consumer Research
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1086/657557