NCBI ROFL: Garlic: a sensory pleasure or a social nuisance?

Discoblog
By ncbi rofl
Nov 17, 2010 6:00 AMNov 19, 2019 8:21 PM
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"A total of 100 female and male shoppers in Helsinki were interviewed to evaluate beliefs, attitudes and norms concerning the consumption of garlic. In a subsequent postal questionnaire, the annoyance related to the smell of garlic, compared with other social odors, was also measured. The most frequent beliefs about garlic pertained to its good taste, unpleasant smell, and healthiness. Users and non-users showed distinctly different belief patterns. Sweat and alcohol were considered the most annoying social odors, and garlic and perfume/aftershave the least so. The Fishbein-Ajzen model, in which individual beliefs and their evaluations as well as subjective norms were used as predictors, explained 35-36% of the variation of the reported consumption and intention to use garlic. The predictive power of the model rose to 56-62% when past behavior was included as a third independent variable. Although the predictive power of attitudes was greater than that of subjective norms, the latter were also significant predictors. Thus, use of garlic is a somewhat unusual form of food-related behavior in that it is controlled by both attitudes and normative factors."

Photo: flickr/ginnerobot Related content: Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Garlic: a way out of work. Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Does garlic protect against vampires? An experimental study. Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Oral malodor and related factors in Japanese senior high school students. WTF is NCBI ROFL? Read our FAQ!

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