Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
880108 | International Journal of Research in Marketing | 2015 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
We replicate the research of Do Vale et al. (2008) and Scott et al. (2008) showing that the diet-conscious tend to eat more when a portion is broken into multiple smaller partitions than when it is unpartitioned. The results show that the partitioning paradox is clearer when diet-consciousness is manipulated than measured. A meta-analysis reveals that the partitioning paradox among the diet-conscious is a medium size effect, but also that partitioning has an opposite and equal size effect on the non-diet conscious: they eat more from the unpartitioned than the partitioned package.
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Authors
Stephen S. Holden, Natalina Zlatevska,