Summary information

Study title

Data from: Breeding by intervening: Exploring the role of associations and deliberation in consumer acceptance of new breeding techniques

Creator

P. Nales (Wageningen University & Research)

Study number / PID

doi:10.17026/dans-xbg-kkbr (DOI)

easy-dataset:277419 (DANS-KNAW)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

New breeding techniques may play an important role in improving food quality, global food security, and sustainability. Previous breeding techniques have, however, met with substantial resistance from society and its consumers. This study examined the role of associations and deliberation in the evaluation of (new) breeding techniques. Breeding techniques studied included conventional breeding, gene-editing, genetic modification (cisgenesis and transgenesis), marker-assisted breeding, and synthetic biology. By using focus group discussions that included individual tasks, we found that when participants rely on their spontaneous associations, they evaluate gene-editing similarly compared to genetic modification. However, after information provision and group discussion, participants obtained different levels of acceptance between techniques. Gene-editing was preferred over genetic modification. Perceived naturalness was found to be the main reason for the different levels of acceptance. These findings highlight the importance of associations and show that beliefs about naturalness remain crucial in understanding how consumers evaluate breeding techniques.


Date Submitted: 2023-03-17

Topics

Not available

Methodology

Data collection period

Not available

Country

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Not available

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Not available

Access

Publisher

Wageningen University & Research

Publication year

2023

Terms of data access

Not available

Related publications

Not available