Emojis were suggested for children to be used to measure food-elicited emotions. The present study was aimed to explore the appropriateness of emojis to describe pre-adolescents’ emotions elicited by foods recalled in relation to different evoked eating contexts and to explore related age- and gender differences. Fifty-five boys and forty-one girls aged 9–13 participated to the study. First, subjects were asked to recall, by means of an open-ended question, the foods they had in specific eating contexts: “Most liked food” and “Most disliked food”, “Breakfast”, “Dinner”, “Snack”, “Birthday” and “Novel food”. Then, they were asked to select the emojis appropriate to describe their feelings for the context-related foods by selecting from a lis...
Research on food-experience is typically challenged by the way questions are worded. We therefore de...
Product-focused emotion research continues to be in ascendency. Corresponding method development is ...
Created in Japan in the late 1990s (Davis & Edberg, 2015), emoji have recently been gaining populari...
Ongoing research has shown that emoji can be used by children to discriminate food products, but it ...
Emoji evolved as an attractive instrument to measure emotions in preadolescents due to their potenti...
Consumers' emotional evaluation of food products has gathered interest among sensory scientists and ...
There is a growing interest in the emotional associations of children to food products in order to b...
Emoji have been argued to have considerable potential for emotion research but are struggling with u...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Human NutritionDelores H. ChambersAlthough consumer emotions have ...
Emoji have been argued to have considerable potential for emotion research but are struggling with u...
Research shows that both emoji and word based questionnaires show information beyond liking measures...
An increasing focus on emotion in consumer and sensory research has led to the development of many i...
Because of the globalization of world food markets there is a growing need for valid and language in...
Emojis are increasingly being used in today’s social communication - both formally in team messaging...
<p>Research on food-experience is typically challenged by the way questions are worded. <a>We theref...
Research on food-experience is typically challenged by the way questions are worded. We therefore de...
Product-focused emotion research continues to be in ascendency. Corresponding method development is ...
Created in Japan in the late 1990s (Davis & Edberg, 2015), emoji have recently been gaining populari...
Ongoing research has shown that emoji can be used by children to discriminate food products, but it ...
Emoji evolved as an attractive instrument to measure emotions in preadolescents due to their potenti...
Consumers' emotional evaluation of food products has gathered interest among sensory scientists and ...
There is a growing interest in the emotional associations of children to food products in order to b...
Emoji have been argued to have considerable potential for emotion research but are struggling with u...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Human NutritionDelores H. ChambersAlthough consumer emotions have ...
Emoji have been argued to have considerable potential for emotion research but are struggling with u...
Research shows that both emoji and word based questionnaires show information beyond liking measures...
An increasing focus on emotion in consumer and sensory research has led to the development of many i...
Because of the globalization of world food markets there is a growing need for valid and language in...
Emojis are increasingly being used in today’s social communication - both formally in team messaging...
<p>Research on food-experience is typically challenged by the way questions are worded. <a>We theref...
Research on food-experience is typically challenged by the way questions are worded. We therefore de...
Product-focused emotion research continues to be in ascendency. Corresponding method development is ...
Created in Japan in the late 1990s (Davis & Edberg, 2015), emoji have recently been gaining populari...