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Order of meals at the counter and distance between options affect student cafeteria vegetarian sales

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Altering the order in which meals are presented at cafeteria counters has been proposed as a way of lowering meat consumption, but remains largely untested. To address this, we undertook two experimental studies involving 105,143 meal selections in the cafeterias of a British university. Placing vegetarian options first on the counter consistently increased their sales when choices were widely separated (>1.5 m; vegetarian sales as a percentage of total meal sales increased by 4.6 and 6.2 percentage points) but there was no evidence of an effect when the options were close together (<1.0 m). This suggests that order effects depend on the physical distance between options.

Description

Journal Title

Nature Food

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2662-1355
2662-1355

Volume Title

1

Publisher

Nature

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as All rights reserved
Sponsorship
NERC (1796601)
NERC (NE/L002507/1)
This work was supported by E.E.G.’s NERC studentship grant number NE/L002507/1 and A.B.’s Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit award