Consumer acceptance of insect-based foods in the Netherlands: academic and commercial implications
Consumer acceptance of insect-based foods in the Netherlands: academic and commercial implications
Despite growing interest in the use of insects as food, uptake of insect-based foods in Europe is low. Existing research into Western consumer acceptance of insects as food tends to emphasise the role of individual cognition in food choice at the expense of social or contextual factors, and typically frames consumer acceptance as a general issue, rather than relevant only for relatively few early adopters. This paper outlines empirical work, theoretically and methodologically informed by a critical appraisal of previous research, with consumers of insect-based convenience foods in the Netherlands. Reported initial motivations for trying insect foods are shown to be substantially different from factors – such as price, taste, availability, and ‘fit’ with established eating practices – which affect repeat consumption. Such factors are congruent with those affecting routine consumption of more conventional foods, indicating that insect foods should be analysed according to similar criteria and should be designed with more practical considerations in mind. Further, a reorientation of consumer acceptance research is proposed. Research should shift from attempts to forecast acceptance and engage with ‘actual’ examples of insect consumption; social, practical and contextual factors affecting food consumption should be emphasised; and – following work on the establishment of other novel foods – early adopters, rather than general populations, should receive greater analytic attention.
47-58
House, Jonas
d12ff336-7b23-4143-8c47-2b2bc072352e
December 2016
House, Jonas
d12ff336-7b23-4143-8c47-2b2bc072352e
House, Jonas
(2016)
Consumer acceptance of insect-based foods in the Netherlands: academic and commercial implications.
Appetite, 107, .
(doi:10.1016/j.appet.2016.07.023).
Abstract
Despite growing interest in the use of insects as food, uptake of insect-based foods in Europe is low. Existing research into Western consumer acceptance of insects as food tends to emphasise the role of individual cognition in food choice at the expense of social or contextual factors, and typically frames consumer acceptance as a general issue, rather than relevant only for relatively few early adopters. This paper outlines empirical work, theoretically and methodologically informed by a critical appraisal of previous research, with consumers of insect-based convenience foods in the Netherlands. Reported initial motivations for trying insect foods are shown to be substantially different from factors – such as price, taste, availability, and ‘fit’ with established eating practices – which affect repeat consumption. Such factors are congruent with those affecting routine consumption of more conventional foods, indicating that insect foods should be analysed according to similar criteria and should be designed with more practical considerations in mind. Further, a reorientation of consumer acceptance research is proposed. Research should shift from attempts to forecast acceptance and engage with ‘actual’ examples of insect consumption; social, practical and contextual factors affecting food consumption should be emphasised; and – following work on the establishment of other novel foods – early adopters, rather than general populations, should receive greater analytic attention.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 26 July 2016
Published date: December 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 504900
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504900
ISSN: 0195-6663
PURE UUID: d3480c1d-479d-4086-b358-88f6fc62364c
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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2025 16:40
Last modified: 23 Sep 2025 02:22
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Jonas House
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