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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
To make everyday food choices is a complex pro-
cess, involving decisions which are influenced by
distinct aspects associated with, among other fac-
tors, purchasing ease, competitiveness of the mar-
ket, advertising campaigns and marketing strategies,
to mention a few related with aspects linked to com-
mercialization. Hence, the objective of this study,
which is integrated in the EATMOT project, was to as-
sess some factors that influence food buying and food
choice, in particular related with aspects such as price,convenience and marketing, as a function of some
sociodemographic and geographic variables, namely,
age, gender, marital status, level of education, living
environment and country of residence.
This study involved a questionnaire survey undertak-
en on 11,960 participants from 16 countries. The in-
strument used in this study was validated and trans-
lated into the different languages of the participating
countries, following double sided translation-checking
methodology. The participants were from: Argentina,
Brazil, Croatia, Egypt, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia,
Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania,
Serbia, Slovenia, and United States of America. The
sample was selected by convenience and the partici-
pation in the study was voluntary, being the question-
naire applied only to adult citizens. Basic descriptive
statistics were used for data analysis and the associ-
ations between variables were investigated by cross-
tabs and chi square tests. Additionally, a tree classifi-
cation analysis was performed to assess the relative
importance of each of the sociodemographic variables
(gender, age group, level of education, country, living
environment or marital status). The analysis followed
the Classification and Regression Trees (CRT) algorithm
with cross validation and the minimum number of cas-
es considered for parent or child nodes was 100 and
50, respectively. For all data analysis, the software SPSS
from IBM Inc. (version 25) was used and the level of sig-
nificance considered was 5%. Results showed statistically significant differences (p <
0.0005) between groups for all sociodemographic vari-
ables (gender, age, education, marital status, living en-
vironment, country) in terms of the value attributed to
convenience, price and marketing when buying foods.
In most cases, the associations between the variables
were considered very weak, although with a little high-
er values for the associations between the country and
variables “value convenience” (V = 0.179), “value price”
(V = 0.158) and “value marketing” (V = 0.167). Tree clas-
sification analysis confirmed for all three dependent
variables that the most influential factor was country.
This work highlighted that people in different coun -
tries and from different sociodemographic groups
show different motivations for buying food products.
Description
Keywords
Food choice Convenience Price Buying intention Marketing
Citation
Guiné RPF, Ferreira M, Correia P, Bartkiene E, Szűcs V, Tarcea M, Ranilović J, Černelič-Bizjak M, Isoldi K, EL-Kenawy A, Ferreira V, Klava D, Korzeniowska M, Vittadini E, Leal M, Frez-Muñoz L, Papageorgiou M, Djekić I (2020) Analysis of food buying behavior: A multinational study framework. Journal of Hygienic Engineering and Design, 33, 108-119.