Current location:home page > Food Technology

Label color and consumer perception

A Cornell researcher says in the current issue of the journal Health Communication that consumers ar…
A Cornell researcher says in the current issue of the journal Health Communication that consumers are more likely to perceive a candy bar as more healthful when it has a green calorie label compared with when it had a red one -- even though the number of calories are the same. Green labels increase perceived healthfulness of foods, especially among consumers who place high importance on healthy eating.

"More and more, calorie labels are popping up on the front of food packaging, including the wrappers of sugary snacks like candy bars. And currently, there's little oversight of these labels," said Jonathon Schuldt, assistant professor of communication and director of Cornell's Social Cognition and Communication Lab. "Our research suggests that the color of calorie labels may have an effect on whether people perceive the food as healthy, over and above the actual nutritional information conveyed by the label, such as calorie content."

Schuldt asked 93 university students to imagine that they were hungry and see a candy bar while waiting in a grocery checkout lane. The students were then shown an image of a candy bar with either a red or a green calorie label. Schuldt asked them whether the candy bar, compared to others, contains more or fewer calories and how healthy it is. The students perceived the green-labeled bar as more healthful than the red one, even though the calorie content was the same.

Schuldt repeated the experiment with 39 online participants who were shown candy with either green or white labels. The participants were asked to what extent the healthiness of food is an important factor in their decision about which foods to buy and eat, on a scale of 1 (not at all important) to 7 (very important).

The more importance the participants placed on healthy eating, the more they perceived the white-labeled candy bar as less healthful -- a pattern that was eliminated when the candy bar had a green label.

"The green calorie labels buffer relatively poor nutrition foods from appearing less healthful among those especially concerned with healthy eating," Schuldt said. The study has implications for nutrition labeling, given that front-of-package calorie labels have become increasingly common in the food marketplace in the United States and Europe. For example, M&Ms and Snickers have green front-of-package calorie flags that are particularly conspicuous to consumers at points-of-purchase.

"As government organizations including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration consider developing a uniform front-of-package labeling system for the U.S. marketplace, these findings suggest that the design and color of the labels may deserve as much attention as the nutritional information they convey," Schuldt said.

Related articles

Making Norway's deadliest food - Nofima breaks ground on facility

The Ås-based facility, which is the only one of its kind in Europe, will offers researchers the oppo…

PTI's new testing facilities to improve 'speed-to-market'

PTI-Europe, a wholly-owned subsidiary of US-based Plastic Technologies, Inc. (PTI), has installed a…

Ramona's Mexican Food to implement CDC Software’s application suite

Through the software implementation, Ramona's also seeks to improve efficiency, reduce costs, facili…

New Tropicana Pure Premium PET clear container 'unique' in juice aisle

Michael Torres, spokesman for the PepsiCo owned brand, said that the new multi-serve 89oz (2.6 litre…

Cherry grading technology 'more perceptive than human eye'

Cherry grading technology 'more perceptive than human eye'

Australia's GP Graders has recently supplied a 10 lane AirJet™ Electronic Cherry Grader with Defect…

Researchers unlock key components of wheat's genetic code

Researchers unlock key components of wheat's genetic code

Scientists from the UK, Germany and the US have identified key parts of the genetic code of wheat, a…