How you are affected by your dinner date
2017-03-28The appearance of your dinner date affects whether you want to spend money on healthy or unhealthy alternatives from the menu, but only if you are a woman. The more attractive women find their company, the more likely they are to buy healthy food. Men are rather more likely to buy expensive drinking and dining options. These are the findings in a new study by Tobias Otterbring at CTF, Service Research Center at 果冻传媒.
鈥 Our purchase decisions are influenced by many factors, often without our conscious awareness. In this study, I investigated how exposure to physically attractive individuals influences which food items people are willing to spend money on and if there are any gender differences, says Tobias Otterbring, Ph. D student in Psychology.
Women buy healthy and men spend more on luxury
In the study, male and female participants were shown full body pictures of attractive or less attractive people of the opposite gender. Directly after, they had to indicate how much money they were willing to spend on different types of foods and beverages.
Women who were exposed to attractive men were more willing to spend money on healthy foods. Men who saw attractive women were instead more motivated to buy expensive drinking and dining options.
The results, Tobias explains, are based on evolutionary psychological theories of human mate preferences. Research shows that men, more than women, appreciate a potential mate鈥檚 beauty and health, whereas women, more than men, appreciate a potential mate鈥檚 status and wealth.
鈥 The conclusion of the study is that attractive individuals of the opposite sex trigger a consumption pattern that mirrors men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 mate preferences. From a marketing perspective, the results indicate that attractive men, such as service staff or 鈥渉ot hunks鈥 in advertising, can increase women鈥檚 tendency to consume products associated with beauty and health. Attractive women, on the other hand, seem to increase men鈥檚 desire to acquire products associated with status and wealth, says Tobias Otterbring.
Contact
Tobias Otterbring, Ph. D Student in Psychology at CTF, Service Research Center at 果冻传媒 Sweden, +46 54-700 25 93, tobias.otterbring@kau.se