Comparing Explicit and Implicit Measures for Assessing Cross-Cultural Food Experience

Daisuke Kaneko*, Ivo Stuldreher, Anna Johanna Carola Reuten, Alexander Toet, Jan B. F. van Erp, Anne-Marie Brouwer

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The present study investigated the potential of implicit physiological measures to provide objective measures of affective food experience in contrast to explicit self-report ratings in a cross-cultural context. Dutch and Thai participants viewed 120 food images portraying universal food image categories (regular and molded food) and cultural food image categories (typically Dutch and Thai food). The universal food images were taken as ground truth high and low valence stimuli, where we assumed no genuine difference in affective experience between nationalities. In contrast, for the cultural food images, we did expect a genuine difference between nationalities. Participants were asked to rate valence, arousal and liking of each food image. In addition, heart rate (HR) and phasic electrodermal activity (EDA) responses to the images were recorded. Typically Asian and Western response biases were found for explicit ratings of regular and molded food with an extreme response style for Dutch, and a middle response style for Thai participants. However, such bias was not observed in HR. For cultural food image categories, HR showed the hypothesized interaction between participant nationality and food image category, reflecting the expected genuine difference between nationalities in affective food experience. Besides presenting participants with images, we also asked participants to taste typically Thai and Dutch drinks. Similar to images, a significant interaction between participant nationality and cultural food category was found for HR. An interaction was also found for sip size, while this was not seen in explicit measures. We attribute this to differences in the moment that these measures were taken. In this study, phasic EDA did not appear to be a sensitive measure of affective food experience, possibly since stimuli mostly differed in valence rather than arousal. To conclude, our study constitutes an example where cultural bias negatively affected the accuracy of self-reports, and only the implicit physiological measures followed the prior expectations of genuine food experience, indicating the potential of these measures to study cross-cultural food experience.
Original languageEnglish
Article number646280
JournalFrontiers in Neuroergonomics
Volume2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We thank Prof. Suwimon Keeratipibul, Dr. Punnida Techaruvichit, and Dr. Panita Ngamchuachit from Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand, for their supports of recruiting Thai participants and providing a useful testing ground for the experiment conducted in Thailand. Also, we thank Dr. Nattapong Thammasan from University of Twente in Enschede, the Netherlands, for his assistance with conducting the experiment in Thailand and thank Mr. Jan Ubbo van Baardewijk for extracting and analyzing physiological data. We also acknowledge the people of The Streetfood Bar in Amersfoort, the Netherlands, for their assistance in creating Thai food images. Funding. This research was funded by the Kikkoman Europe R&D Laboratory B.V.

FundersFunder number
Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok
University of Twente
Kikkoman Europe R&D Laboratory B.V.

    Keywords

    • Cross-cultural
    • Response bias
    • Explicit
    • Implicit
    • Physiological measures
    • HR
    • EDA
    • Sip size

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