Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
submittedVersion
Publication Date
1-2022
Abstract
Principally due to unhealthy food choices, almost half of adults worldwide are overweight or obese. Current food retail practices bear some responsibility for such public health issues. We argue that numerous attempts to promote healthy eating have been unsuccessful due to the failure to account for our outdated evolved food selection mechanisms. Building on the evolutionary mismatch hypothesis and contrasting ancestral versus present-day foraging environments, we discuss how marketing activities exploit evolutionarily old food preferences and elicit unhealthy food choices for profit maximization at the expense of public health in terms of food consumption. We conclude by explaining how to mitigate this harmful trend by applying the law of law’s leverage to facilitate effective strategies to increase healthy food choices. Notably, we show how evolutionary psychology principles can be used to reconcile competing interests between consumers, retailers, and decision-makers responsible for public health policies.
Keywords
consumer behavior, evolutionary mismatch, food preferences, food marketing
Discipline
Applied Behavior Analysis | Social Psychology | Social Psychology and Interaction
Research Areas
Psychology
Publication
Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences
ISSN
2330-2925
Identifier
10.1037/ebs0000288
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Citation
FOLWARCZNY, Michal, OTTERBRING, Tobias, SIGURDSSON, Valdimar, TAN, Lynn K. L., & LI, Norman P..(2022). Old minds, new marketplaces: How evolved psychological mechanisms trigger mismatched food preferences. Evolutionary Behavioral Sciences, .
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3579
Copyright Owner and License
Authors
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1037/ebs0000288
Included in
Applied Behavior Analysis Commons, Social Psychology Commons, Social Psychology and Interaction Commons