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The insectivore’s dilemma,and how to take the West out of it
Affiliation:1. Centre for the Study of the Senses and Institute of Philosophy, School of Advanced Study, University of London, United Kingdom;2. Head of Culinary Research and Development, Nordic Food Lab, Copenhagen, Denmark;3. Crossmodal Research Laboratory, Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford University, United Kingdom
Abstract:A number of health and agricultural organizations have been encouraging Westerners to integrate insects into their diet, without success. Appealing to consumer’s reason and responsibility, as they do, is likely to reinforce a dilemma in the mind of consumers: many know that they can, in principle, eat insects, and perhaps that they should eat some, but very few are willing to eat them. Here we argue that current strategies are on the wrong track in identifying the key obstacle to overcome as a question of the negative representation of insects. Decades of laboratory research, as well as years of experience in gastronomy, suggest that people’s food choices are relatively immune to rational changes of representation, and instead tend to be driven by taste preferences and exposure. Here we suggest an alternative sensorially-driven strategy, which stands a much greater chance of making people eat insects on a regular basis. The turn – or better said return – to entomophagy in this sense, needs to be driven by a psychologically realistic motivation and gastronomic interest.
Keywords:Entomophagy  Insects  Flavor  Eating behavior  Neophobia  Distaste  Disgust  Multisensory  Food policy
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