Robots in the kitchen: The automation of food preparation in restaurants and the compounding effects of perceived love and disgust on consumer evaluations

IF 4.6 2区 医学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Ethan Pancer , Theodore J. Noseworthy , Lindsay McShane , Nükhet Taylor , Matthew Philp
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Abstract

Restaurants are swiftly embracing automation to prepare food, experimenting with innovations from robotic arms for frying foods to pizza-making robots. While these advances promise to enhance efficiency and productivity, their impact on consumer psychology remains largely unexplored. We present four experiments that demonstrate how food service automation leads to negative downstream effects (i.e., diminished taste perceptions, decreased willingness to pay, less favorable attitudes towards food items) across multiple food categories. This stems in part from two distinct contagion effects, whereby automation appears to undermine the food's ability to contain symbolic love (positive contagion from human contact) while simultaneously increasing feelings of disgust (negative contagion from machine contact). Moreover, we highlight how communicating the consumer-oriented benefits of automation can suppress the disgust associated with automation and subsequently mitigate the deleterious effects on consumer evaluations. Our findings suggest that service retailers should consider the psychological impact on consumers when shifting away from human involvement in a category as intimate and consequential as the production of our food.
厨房里的机器人:餐厅食品制作的自动化以及消费者的喜爱和厌恶感对消费者评价的复合效应。
餐厅正在迅速采用自动化方式准备食物,尝试从机械臂煎炸食物到披萨制作机器人等各种创新。虽然这些进步有望提高效率和生产率,但它们对消费者心理的影响在很大程度上仍未得到探讨。我们通过四项实验展示了餐饮自动化如何在多个食品类别中导致负面的下游效应(即味觉感知减弱、支付意愿下降、对食品的好感度降低)。这部分源于两种截然不同的传染效应,即自动化似乎削弱了食品包含象征性爱的能力(来自人类接触的积极传染),同时增加了厌恶感(来自机器接触的消极传染)。此外,我们还强调了如何通过宣传自动化给消费者带来的好处来抑制与自动化相关的厌恶感,从而减轻对消费者评价的有害影响。我们的研究结果表明,服务零售商在像食品生产这样关系密切、影响深远的类别中放弃人工参与时,应考虑到对消费者的心理影响。
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来源期刊
Appetite
Appetite 医学-行为科学
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
566
审稿时长
13.4 weeks
期刊介绍: Appetite is an international research journal specializing in cultural, social, psychological, sensory and physiological influences on the selection and intake of foods and drinks. It covers normal and disordered eating and drinking and welcomes studies of both human and non-human animal behaviour toward food. Appetite publishes research reports, reviews and commentaries. Thematic special issues appear regularly. From time to time the journal carries abstracts from professional meetings. Submissions to Appetite are expected to be based primarily on observations directly related to the selection and intake of foods and drinks; papers that are primarily focused on topics such as nutrition or obesity will not be considered unless they specifically make a novel scientific contribution to the understanding of appetite in line with the journal's aims and scope.
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