An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting

3D printing has the potential to produce on-demand food tailored to individuals’ needs and preferences. The present study explored 3D printed food acceptance in a real-life military setting. Over a period of 4 weeks, soldiers consumed and evaluated multiple recovery snack bars. In week 1, participants received a benchmark bar that was created with conventional manufacturing processes. In week 2 to 4 participants received a 3D printed snack bar with increasing customisation options: choice of texture (soft or crunchy) in week 2; choice of texture and taste (sweet or savoury) in week 3; and choice of texture, taste and ingredients (4 types of dough, 13 types of filling) in week 4. Attitudes towards 3D food printing and potential drivers of 3D printed food acceptance were assessed in weeks 1 and 4 before and after repeated consumption of the snack bars. After repeated consumption participants judged 3D printed food to be significantly better as compared to before consumption (t = 2.86, p = 0.015). Food neophobia, food technology neophobia and food choice motives did not change during the experiment (all p > 0.05). The benchmark bar was liked better than the 3D printed bars. However, among the 3D printed bars, mean scores on overall liking, and liking of taste and texture were highest for the version that was customized most (week 4). Our findings illustrate that consumer empowerment, desired degree of personalisation, state of development and appropriateness of 3D food printing technology all play a role in 3D printed food acceptance.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Caulier, Sophie, Doets, Esmée, Noort, Martijn
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:3D printing, Acceptance, Consumer attitudes, Consumer empowerment, Food product development,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/an-exploratory-consumer-study-of-3d-printed-food-perception-in-a-
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5668012024-12-24 Caulier, Sophie Doets, Esmée Noort, Martijn Article/Letter to editor Food Quality and Preference 86 (2020) ISSN: 0950-3293 An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting 2020 3D printing has the potential to produce on-demand food tailored to individuals’ needs and preferences. The present study explored 3D printed food acceptance in a real-life military setting. Over a period of 4 weeks, soldiers consumed and evaluated multiple recovery snack bars. In week 1, participants received a benchmark bar that was created with conventional manufacturing processes. In week 2 to 4 participants received a 3D printed snack bar with increasing customisation options: choice of texture (soft or crunchy) in week 2; choice of texture and taste (sweet or savoury) in week 3; and choice of texture, taste and ingredients (4 types of dough, 13 types of filling) in week 4. Attitudes towards 3D food printing and potential drivers of 3D printed food acceptance were assessed in weeks 1 and 4 before and after repeated consumption of the snack bars. After repeated consumption participants judged 3D printed food to be significantly better as compared to before consumption (t = 2.86, p = 0.015). Food neophobia, food technology neophobia and food choice motives did not change during the experiment (all p > 0.05). The benchmark bar was liked better than the 3D printed bars. However, among the 3D printed bars, mean scores on overall liking, and liking of taste and texture were highest for the version that was customized most (week 4). Our findings illustrate that consumer empowerment, desired degree of personalisation, state of development and appropriateness of 3D food printing technology all play a role in 3D printed food acceptance. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/an-exploratory-consumer-study-of-3d-printed-food-perception-in-a- 10.1016/j.foodqual.2020.104001 https://edepot.wur.nl/526291 3D printing Acceptance Consumer attitudes Consumer empowerment Food product development https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic 3D printing
Acceptance
Consumer attitudes
Consumer empowerment
Food product development
3D printing
Acceptance
Consumer attitudes
Consumer empowerment
Food product development
spellingShingle 3D printing
Acceptance
Consumer attitudes
Consumer empowerment
Food product development
3D printing
Acceptance
Consumer attitudes
Consumer empowerment
Food product development
Caulier, Sophie
Doets, Esmée
Noort, Martijn
An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting
description 3D printing has the potential to produce on-demand food tailored to individuals’ needs and preferences. The present study explored 3D printed food acceptance in a real-life military setting. Over a period of 4 weeks, soldiers consumed and evaluated multiple recovery snack bars. In week 1, participants received a benchmark bar that was created with conventional manufacturing processes. In week 2 to 4 participants received a 3D printed snack bar with increasing customisation options: choice of texture (soft or crunchy) in week 2; choice of texture and taste (sweet or savoury) in week 3; and choice of texture, taste and ingredients (4 types of dough, 13 types of filling) in week 4. Attitudes towards 3D food printing and potential drivers of 3D printed food acceptance were assessed in weeks 1 and 4 before and after repeated consumption of the snack bars. After repeated consumption participants judged 3D printed food to be significantly better as compared to before consumption (t = 2.86, p = 0.015). Food neophobia, food technology neophobia and food choice motives did not change during the experiment (all p > 0.05). The benchmark bar was liked better than the 3D printed bars. However, among the 3D printed bars, mean scores on overall liking, and liking of taste and texture were highest for the version that was customized most (week 4). Our findings illustrate that consumer empowerment, desired degree of personalisation, state of development and appropriateness of 3D food printing technology all play a role in 3D printed food acceptance.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet 3D printing
Acceptance
Consumer attitudes
Consumer empowerment
Food product development
author Caulier, Sophie
Doets, Esmée
Noort, Martijn
author_facet Caulier, Sophie
Doets, Esmée
Noort, Martijn
author_sort Caulier, Sophie
title An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting
title_short An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting
title_full An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting
title_fullStr An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting
title_full_unstemmed An exploratory consumer study of 3D printed food perception in a real-life military setting
title_sort exploratory consumer study of 3d printed food perception in a real-life military setting
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/an-exploratory-consumer-study-of-3d-printed-food-perception-in-a-
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