A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States
This research has three goals. First, it sets out to compare consumer acceptance of lab-grown meat in the U.S. and in Singapore. Second, it seeks to explain the difference in Americans' and Singaporeans' acceptance of lab-grown meat by examining their eating motivations. Specifically, we f...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-79702022-03-18T06:09:36Z A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States CHONG, Mark LEUNG, Angela K. Y. LUA, Verity This research has three goals. First, it sets out to compare consumer acceptance of lab-grown meat in the U.S. and in Singapore. Second, it seeks to explain the difference in Americans' and Singaporeans' acceptance of lab-grown meat by examining their eating motivations. Specifically, we focused on social image motivations – the motivations to present oneself positively in social contexts. Third, this study also aims to assess if exposure to information about lab-grown meat communicated by celebrity versus expert social media influencers (SMIs) can impact people's acceptance of lab-grown meat products. Our analysis showed that Singaporean participants had greater acceptance of lab-grown meat compared to their American counterparts, and this cultural difference was explained by Singaporeans' stronger social image eating motivations. In other words, cross-country differences in motivation to eat for a favorable social image can explain differences in consumer acceptance of lab-grown meat. The Singaporean cultural trait of kiasuism, which is exemplified by the fear of losing out or being left behind, may explain Singaporeans' motivation to project an image of being ‘trailblazers’ (vis-a-vis other nationalities) by expressing a higher acceptance of novel foods such as lab-grown meat. Results also revealed that the information about lab-grown meat being communicated by a celebrity or an expert SMI did not make a difference in participants' acceptance of lab-grown meat in both countries. Together, this research suggests an interesting implication that novel food industries and marketers can promote product branding by boosting media coverage (including online social media) of their lab-grown products' ‘firsts’ (e.g., the first production line in the world, the first technological breakthrough), especially in markets with high social image concerns. 2022-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6971 info:doi/10.1016/j.appet.2022.105990 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7970/viewcontent/Chong_Leung_Lua_2022__av.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Alternative proteins Eating motivations Lab-grown meat Social image Social media influencers (SMIs) Asian Studies Food Science Health Communication International and Intercultural Communication Social Media |
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Alternative proteins Eating motivations Lab-grown meat Social image Social media influencers (SMIs) Asian Studies Food Science Health Communication International and Intercultural Communication Social Media CHONG, Mark LEUNG, Angela K. Y. LUA, Verity A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States |
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This research has three goals. First, it sets out to compare consumer acceptance of lab-grown meat in the U.S. and in Singapore. Second, it seeks to explain the difference in Americans' and Singaporeans' acceptance of lab-grown meat by examining their eating motivations. Specifically, we focused on social image motivations – the motivations to present oneself positively in social contexts. Third, this study also aims to assess if exposure to information about lab-grown meat communicated by celebrity versus expert social media influencers (SMIs) can impact people's acceptance of lab-grown meat products. Our analysis showed that Singaporean participants had greater acceptance of lab-grown meat compared to their American counterparts, and this cultural difference was explained by Singaporeans' stronger social image eating motivations. In other words, cross-country differences in motivation to eat for a favorable social image can explain differences in consumer acceptance of lab-grown meat. The Singaporean cultural trait of kiasuism, which is exemplified by the fear of losing out or being left behind, may explain Singaporeans' motivation to project an image of being ‘trailblazers’ (vis-a-vis other nationalities) by expressing a higher acceptance of novel foods such as lab-grown meat. Results also revealed that the information about lab-grown meat being communicated by a celebrity or an expert SMI did not make a difference in participants' acceptance of lab-grown meat in both countries. Together, this research suggests an interesting implication that novel food industries and marketers can promote product branding by boosting media coverage (including online social media) of their lab-grown products' ‘firsts’ (e.g., the first production line in the world, the first technological breakthrough), especially in markets with high social image concerns. |
format |
text |
author |
CHONG, Mark LEUNG, Angela K. Y. LUA, Verity |
author_facet |
CHONG, Mark LEUNG, Angela K. Y. LUA, Verity |
author_sort |
CHONG, Mark |
title |
A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States |
title_short |
A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States |
title_full |
A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States |
title_fullStr |
A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States |
title_full_unstemmed |
A cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in Singapore and the United States |
title_sort |
cross-country investigation of social image motivation and acceptance of lab-grown meat in singapore and the united states |
publisher |
Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/6971 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/7970/viewcontent/Chong_Leung_Lua_2022__av.pdf |
_version_ |
1770576182413099008 |