Unveiling Health Attitudes and Creating Good-For-You Foods: The Genomics Metaphor, Consumer Innovative Web-Based Technologies
Authors:
H. R. Moskowitz a;
J. B. German b;
I. S. Saguy c
| Affiliations: | a Moskowitz Jacobs Inc., White Plains, New York, USA |
b Nestl Research Center, Switzerland |
|
| c Institute of Biochemistry, Food Science and Nutrition, Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environmental Quality Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel |
DOI:
10.1080/10408690590956350
Publication Frequency:
10 issues per year
Published in:
Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition,
Volume
45,
Issue
3
April
2005
, pages 165
- 191
Subjects:
Food Engineering;
Food Microbiology;
Nutraceuticals & Functional Foods;
Nutrition;
Processing;
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Abstract
This article presents an integrated analysis of three emerging knowledge bases in the nutrition and consumer products industries, and how they may effect the food industry. These knowledge bases produce new vistas for corporate product development, especially with respect to those foods that are positioned as 'good for you.' Couched within the current thinking of state-of-the-art knowledge and information, this article highlights how today's thinking about accelerated product development can be introduced into the food and health industries to complement these three research areas. The 3 knowledge bases are: the genomics revolution, which has opened new insights into understanding the interactions of personal needs of individual consumers with nutritionally relevant components of the foods; the investigation of food choice by scientific studies; the development of large scale databases (mega-studies) about the consumer mind. These knowledge bases, combined with new methods to understand the consumer through research, make possible a more focused development. The confluence of trends outlined in this article provides the corporation with the beginnings of a new path to a knowledge-based, principles-grounded product-development system. The approaches hold the potential to create foods based upon people's nutritional requirements combined with their individual preferences. Integrating these emerging knowledge areas with new consumer research techniques may well reshape how the food industry develops new products to satisfy consumer needs and wants.
|
| Keywords: conjoint analysis; databasing; food choice; nutrition |
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