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Consumer acceptance of insects as food: Integrating psychological and socio-cultural perspectives

Consumer acceptance of insects as food: Integrating psychological and socio-cultural perspectives
Consumer acceptance of insects as food: Integrating psychological and socio-cultural perspectives
Although interest in the use of insects as food is growing in Europe and the US (the “West”), Western insect consumption remains far from widespread. Western resistance to entomophagy is often contrasted with the favourable position of edible insects in other regions, but little scholarship thus far has engaged with the question of why this difference exists. Drawing mainly on two qualitative studies, we compare the factors affecting insect consumption in contexts where it is both established (northeast Thailand) and where it is not (the Netherlands). We argue that the integration of different disciplinary perspectives elucidates the complexity of consumer acceptance, which goes beyond simple “willingness to eat” insects. Our research shows that the positioning of insects as an appreciated, regularly consumed food is the result of the intersection of a broad range of psychological, socio-cultural, practical and contextual factors. In addition to the commonly discussed psychological factors, regular insect consumption is determined by previous experience, culinary knowledge, wider cultural associations, established routines of food provisioning and eating, and the availability, price, form and taste of products. We suggest both demand-side factors (changing consumer perceptions) and supply-side factors (creating tasty, usable, distinctive and accessible products) are equally important to gaining consumer acceptance. We also emphasise that initial motivations to eat insects and repeated consumption are different things, and that there is a need to distinguish between the two in future scholarly and commercial efforts.
375-386
Springer Cham
Tan, Hui Shan Grace
dbdf63fb-c108-42b7-8cf8-551add9b07e5
House, Jonas
d12ff336-7b23-4143-8c47-2b2bc072352e
Halloran, Afton
Flore, Roberto
Vantomme, Paul
Roos, Nanna
Tan, Hui Shan Grace
dbdf63fb-c108-42b7-8cf8-551add9b07e5
House, Jonas
d12ff336-7b23-4143-8c47-2b2bc072352e
Halloran, Afton
Flore, Roberto
Vantomme, Paul
Roos, Nanna

Tan, Hui Shan Grace and House, Jonas (2018) Consumer acceptance of insects as food: Integrating psychological and socio-cultural perspectives. In, Halloran, Afton, Flore, Roberto, Vantomme, Paul and Roos, Nanna (eds.) Edible Insects in Sustainable Food Systems. Springer Cham, pp. 375-386. (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-74011-9_23).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Although interest in the use of insects as food is growing in Europe and the US (the “West”), Western insect consumption remains far from widespread. Western resistance to entomophagy is often contrasted with the favourable position of edible insects in other regions, but little scholarship thus far has engaged with the question of why this difference exists. Drawing mainly on two qualitative studies, we compare the factors affecting insect consumption in contexts where it is both established (northeast Thailand) and where it is not (the Netherlands). We argue that the integration of different disciplinary perspectives elucidates the complexity of consumer acceptance, which goes beyond simple “willingness to eat” insects. Our research shows that the positioning of insects as an appreciated, regularly consumed food is the result of the intersection of a broad range of psychological, socio-cultural, practical and contextual factors. In addition to the commonly discussed psychological factors, regular insect consumption is determined by previous experience, culinary knowledge, wider cultural associations, established routines of food provisioning and eating, and the availability, price, form and taste of products. We suggest both demand-side factors (changing consumer perceptions) and supply-side factors (creating tasty, usable, distinctive and accessible products) are equally important to gaining consumer acceptance. We also emphasise that initial motivations to eat insects and repeated consumption are different things, and that there is a need to distinguish between the two in future scholarly and commercial efforts.

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Published date: 15 May 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504902
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504902
PURE UUID: 1435c04f-2d23-41e7-a2e6-bfacadac9eec
ORCID for Jonas House: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6003-8276

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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2025 16:40
Last modified: 23 Sep 2025 02:22

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Contributors

Author: Hui Shan Grace Tan
Author: Jonas House ORCID iD
Editor: Afton Halloran
Editor: Roberto Flore
Editor: Paul Vantomme
Editor: Nanna Roos

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