Award Winning
Journal Article
Although food marketing is often accused of increasing population obesity, the relationship between individual responsiveness to marketing and obesity has yet to be established: are people with obesity more responsive to food marketing and, if so, is it a stable trait or can it be reversed by bariatric surgery?
The authors studied the responses to three common marketing tactics that frame foods and portions as healthier than they really are in three groups of women: 1) a group of patients with obesity before, three months, and twelve months after bariatric surgery, 2) a control group of lean women, and 3) another control group of women with obesity but not seeking any treatment for their obesity.
People with obesity were initially more responsive to food marketing, but bariatric surgery reduced their responsiveness down to the level of lean people. In addition to documenting another potential psychological consequence of bariatric surgery, the authors' study suggests that the higher responsiveness of people with obesity is not a stable individual predisposition and supports the notion of a reciprocal relationship between obesity and sensitivity to environmental influences.
Faculty
Associate Professor of Marketing
Professor of Marketing