26.1 Introduction: new packaging techniques and the
consumer
New packaging techniques promise consumers safe food products that keep their
high quality throughout shelf-life. The improved quality has been achieved by
applying tailored technological solutions that require highly specialised knowl-
edge. From consumers’ point of view these new techniques require explanations
if food can keep fresh for an unexpected and thereby unnaturally long time.
Consumers in general tend to be suspicious towards novelty in food products as
any new element can be potentially harmful (Rozin and Royzman, 2001).
Furthermore, applying technology to achieve benefits can add to distrust as
technology by itself can have negative connotations. Understanding how the
benefits have been achieved requires advanced consumer education on the
principles of food spoilage.
The basic functions of the package have been described as containing the
foodstuff, protecting and maintaining its quality, providing information for the
consumer, convenience in use, being environmentally friendly, and selling the
product (Hurme et al., 2002). For consumers, the favourable packaging
attributes include convenience in opening, resealing, storing and disposing
(Eastlack et al., 1993; Mikkola et al., 1997). These positive attributes are almost
all related to the practical properties of packages and how easy they are to use,
but include no safety issues. Similarly, most negative attributes referred to lack
of convenience, the only safety related attributes listed were ‘product spoils
easily’ and ‘can spill or leak’ (Eastlack et al., 1993).
Most active and intelligent packaging methods aim at improving the quality
and safety of food products. The improvement of safety by producing longer
26
Testing consumer responses to new
packaging concepts
L. La¨hteenma¨ki and A. Arvola, VTT Biotechnology, Finland
safe shelf-life may be a hard concept to sell to consumers. Safety is likely to be
for consumers a self-evident feature and therefore regarded as a basic
requirement in packed food products. Therefore, consumers do not assess the
package based on its safety merits, rather they assess the convenience of using
the pack when taking the presumably safe foodstuff from the package. This
implies that consumers need to be educated about the possible benefits that
active and intelligent packaging can provide them and treating the different
types of packaging solutions as integral parts of the product rather than the
foodstuff and packaging as separate issues. Although active and intelligent
packaging methods have been studied widely and innovations have been
developed very few of them have been developed into commercially available
products (Hurme et al., 2002). One reason for the slow progress may have been
the anticipated consumer concerns of these new applications. Surprisingly,
however, very few consumer studies have been published on this topic.
This chapter describes how different approaches can be used to study
consumers’ attitudes towards active and intelligent packaging technology. The
first section calls attention to the special problems that are encountered when
novel technologies are studied. Then the principles of most frequently used
qualitative and quantitative methods are introduced and their strengths and
weaknesses are discussed. A short overview of our current knowledge on
consumer attitudes towards active and intelligent packaging will follow the
methodological section. The few studies carried out have mostly dealt with
consumers’ attitudes towards oxygen absorbers and time-temperature indicators.
The last section in this chapter will discuss the future prospects of active and
intelligent packaging from a consumer standpoint; what the issues are that need
to be taken into account and how to approach possible consumer concerns.
26.2 Special problems in testing responses to new packaging
The novelty aspect and the fact that food products are regarded as entities
including both package and foodstuff create challenges for studying consumer
responses to new packaging technologies. When asked about familiar issues
consumers tend to have either positive or negative attitudes that are activated by
asking questions related to them. This process depends on the importance and
topicality of the subject. Information on important or on relevant matters are
given more attention and the belief structures tend to be more complex for
relevant than for non-relevant issues. Recent exposure to the topic, on the other
hand, makes the beliefs more accessible. When required to give answers about
new food products or technologies these responses can be very arbitrary. People
give responses although they are not sure what the question actually involves
since this is the socially most appropriate and easiest way of handling questions.
The issues that come out are highly dependent on the associations these new
technologies create in consumers’ minds and what other matters are relevant for
the consumer at the time.
Testing consumer responses to new packaging concepts 551
In order to gain meaningful responses, consumers need to be made more
familiar with intelligent packaging. This can be done by explaining what a
concept, whether active packaging or special indicator, means or by showing
concrete examples of these active or intelligent package solutions. A simple way
to explain to interviewees what the applications are and how they function is a
set of photographs that are easy to take to different places. Furthermore, they are
the same for all interviewees regardless of the time and location. If real food
packages or indicators are used, they have to be replaced at each demonstration.
This will raise the expenses of the study, not to mention the amount of products
that need to be carried to different locations and stored at accurate temperatures.
Modern technology makes it possible to carry out research by using the internet
or computer-aided data collection systems. With these applications it is possible
to demonstrate how the indicators work with no need to use actual food
packages as samples.
The most feasible way of demonstrating these package solutions is to show
food products with and without the indicators, absorbers or emitters. The
responses are then related both to the example food and the packaging
technology. This raises the question whether packaging technologies can be
studied separately from their applications in consumer studies, as they provide
improvements for the quality of food, not improvements for packaging. For
consumer acceptance the perceived benefits are important. Consumers will
assess the benefits they gain, but they also have concerns about how these
benefits have been achieved. Furthermore, any technology that solely provides
advantages for the other actors in the food chain are not easily accepted by
consumers especially if they raise prices.
26.3 Methods for testing consumer responses
The central objective in consumer research is to find out whether consumers are
willing to accept new packaging technologies, whether there are concerns that
may obstruct or delay acceptance and how the benefits provided by the new
technologies are perceived. The methods used can be broadly divided into two
categories; qualitative and quantitative approaches. With qualitative methods we
can get systematic information about how consumers think and formulate their
opinions about food and packaging related issues. These techniques are valuable
when we want to gather information about the different possible concerns
consumers attach to novel technologies or we want to define what the reasoning
is behind these concerns. The advantage of qualitative techniques is that
consumers can use their own language and expressions to describe their
opinions. Often qualitative techniques are used as pilot studies for quantitative
approaches, but they are gaining value as independent tools. The most frequently
used qualitative methods are focus group discussion and individual interviews.
Both these types of methods can be applied with different techniques depending
on the question on the hand.
552 Novel food packaging techniques
Qualitative methods describe how consumers think about certain issues but
they do not give the frequency of these ideas or how important the ideas are to
different people. Quantitative methods are used when we want to find out how
many people have a certain opinion or estimate the strength of an opinion. The
quantitative surveys finding out people’s opinions can be carried out as interviews
or questionnaires or a combination of these. Experimental designs are a special
type of quantitative study in which respondents are given different treatments,
e.g., samples to try, and their responses are measured and compared in different
experimental groups or with a control group. Below are short descriptions of
typical features of most typically used methods and implications of their use in
studying novel packaging materials. Detailed descriptions of the methods can be
found in textbooks.
26.3.1 Focus group discussions
Focus group discussions provide information on how consumers talk about
particular issues (Casey and Krueger, 1994). Moderating focus groups require
careful preparation and the questions need to be outlined beforehand. The
moderator needs to be well-trained for the task and possess appropriate social skills
on diplomacy and bringing all participants into discussion as equal members of the
group. The basic principle is that the moderator does not lead the discussion in any
specific direction, as long as the conversation remains topical. The participants in
the discussion group respond with comments and opinions from each other and
thus the discussion deals with aspects coming from several individuals. This social
interaction enables the pondering of the importance of matters that have been
raised during the discussion. Analysing the focus group data is a relatively difficult
task because the material produced during interactive discussions tends to be vast
and branch in various directions. Due to this heterogeneity of material Casey and
Krueger (1994) recommend that at least three groups with the same questions and
similar participants should be run to cover the variation.
Where packaging issues are concerned focus group discussion works well with
consumers because new technologies can be demonstrated as part of the group
session and there is no pressure to be an expert on the topic. Experts working for
retailers, food industry, authority or consumer associations may find group
discussion less relaxing than consumers, since these individuals should be
knowledgeable about the novel packaging developments. This may cause tension
in a group discussion. If the aim in discussion is a free exchange of ideas and views
about the future, tension may exclude some participants from the discussion or
ideas and opinions are carefully controlled. Therefore respondents with vested
interests in the topic are easier to handle in a one-to-one interview situation.
26.3.2 Qualitative and quantitative interviews
Interviews allow direct interaction between respondent and interviewer.
Individual interviews can be carried out using several techniques. Some
Testing consumer responses to new packaging concepts 553
techniques follow very structured procedures with a predefined order and form
of questions; others allow an interviewee’s responses to delineate how to
continue as long as the relevant topics are discussed. The type of interview is
typically selected on the basis of research questions. Packaging issues are rarely
sensitive issues and are therefore easy to talk about. Often in this type of study
either semi-structured or structured interviews have been used.
Qualitative interviews are used when we want know how respondents think
about packaging and we do not have enough previous knowledge about what the
possible responses can be. The approach is suitable for examining more complex
issues as participants are not restricted in predefined response alternatives. Data
analysis with a qualitative approach tends to be time consuming and the
researcher has to be very skilful in analysing transcripts of focus group
discussions.
If we want to quantify responses the interviews are typically carried out with
structured outlines and sometime the possible response alternatives are
preselected. The advantage of carrying out an interview survey rather than a
questionnaire is that interviewees can ask for explanations if they do not
understand questions and also interviewers can ask for elaboration if the
responses contain ambiguous expressions. With novel packaging solutions,
using interviews enables a demonstration of what these absorbers and indicators
are like when they are attached to the food package.
26.3.3 Questionnaires
Questionnaires offer a relatively inexpensive method to study what people
think about an issue on average. A questionnaire approach can be selected if
we know well enough what the possible response alternatives are that
consumers are likely to give or we have an explicit predefined question. With
appropriate sampling techniques the respondents can be selected to fulfil
certain predefined criteria. Typically respondents are selected based on their
socio-demographic background (sex, age, education, profession) or based on
their consumption or buying habits. Often food-related studies are targeted on
those who typically use the product or questions are asked of those who have
the main responsibility for food choice in their own household. Due to the
latter criterion, the majority of the food or packaging related studies have had
mostly female respondents (Anon., 1991; Korhonen et al., 1999; Mikkola et
al., 1997).
The limitation of questionnaires in packaging related research is that items in
a questionnaire should refer to familiar things. If consumers are asked opinions
about themes they are not familiar with, the reliability and validity of these
responses may not be very good. There are several textbooks describing how to
construct a questionnaire and ask factual and attitudinal questions, but the basic
rule is that the questions should be easily comprehensible and provide
alternatives that consumers can relate to.
554 Novel food packaging techniques
26.3.4 Experimental designs
Experimental designs are useful when novel applications in the food domain are
studied as they provide a chance to familiarise the respondents with the new
technologies and thus reduce fears that rise from uncertainty. The designs also
enable controlled comparisons of consumer responses to different types of
packaging solutions. Consumers can experience concretely how indicators or
absorbers look and function and what their advantages are. In most experimental
set-ups there is a need for a control product, which is often the same product
packed without the indicator or other active component. This enables a direct
comparison of how acceptable the new applications are in relation to the existing
packaging methods. As most consumer responses tend to be relative, the
experimental design can produce more reliable information in this sense,
although the drawback is that instructions tend to make the assessments rather
artificial.
26.4 Consumer attitudes towards active and intelligent
packaging
26.4.1 General attitudes
The idea of active and intelligent packaging has received a generally positive
response from consumers and their representatives. The reason may be that they
seem to provide solutions to consumer concerns. According to Korhonen et al.
(1999) about half of Finnish respondents (n 460) did not trust that all food
products would still be edible on their expiry date. Half of the consumers also
reported that they would choose packages from the bottom of a chilled counter
to ensure the freshness of the product. The active and intelligent packaging
methods were more familiar to those who were involved with packaging issues.
A small number of individuals (n 21) who are responsible for delivering
information to consumers about the packaging issues in Finland were
interviewed in 1995 (Mikkola et al., 1997). The group consisted of retailers,
journalists and government officials. When asked whether they were familiar
with modified atmosphere and vacuum packs, four out of five interviewees
could recognise both of these. Furthermore, about half of the respondents could
recognise moisture absorbers (57%), oxygen absorbers (52%) and time-
temperature indicators (42%). The interviewees had a positive attitude towards
these examples of active and intelligent packaging, especially if applied to foods
that are easily perishable, such as chilled foods, vegetables, some bakery
products, meat or fish products.
People have different requirements for food packaging. In a study carried out
in the UK (Anon., 1991) consumers could be divided into three groups
according to their attitudes towards the safety of chilled foods. The ‘ultra-
cautious’ are likely to throw away all foods that have passed the use by date, the
‘cautious’ use their own judgement and believe in some safety margins around
the given dates, whereas the ‘non-cautious’ care very little about dates. A
Testing consumer responses to new packaging concepts 555
considerable number of consumers fell into the ‘ultra-cautious’ category
whereas the ‘non-cautious’ were in a minority. The study itself targeted
consumer acceptance of time-temperature indicators and reflected the
acceptance of these new devices to the needs these three respondent groups had.
26.4.2 Acceptance of oxygen absorbers
When asked about the possible benefits of absorbers or emitters, the
interviewees (n 21) mentioned that food products retain their good quality
longer, which may be especially helpful for small households and those who
shop once a week (Mikkola et al., 1997). The absorbers were believed to
improve safety by reducing microbial risks and thereby contributing to a
decrease in the use of additives in food products. On the negative side, the added
components can increase price and produce more waste. People also may eat
older food if it keeps a longer time in good condition. Furthermore, the
possibility that these absorbers or emitters could contain harmful substances that
may be ingested by vulnerable consumer groups, such as older people and
children, caused concern.
Acceptance of oxygen absorbers among Finnish consumers was examined
with an experimental design. Mikkola et al. (1997) carried out a study where
consumers (n 346) were given two types of food products to take home. Sliced
rye bread and pizza filled with ham were packed with or without oxygen
absorbers. The products were stored at the research institute so that their
delivery date was close to the best by date. A trained laboratory panel assessed
the samples and gave higher quality points on appearance, flavour and freshness
for pizza when it was packed with the absorber than when it contained no
absorber, but there was no difference in the assessed quality of sliced rye bread.
Consumers, however, assessed both products with oxygen absorbers as having
higher quality, although the difference between oxygen absorber product and
conventional product was small for rye bread. In the trained panel evaluation the
samples were blind coded and the panel did not know what the samples were
when they tasted them. Consumers, on the other hand received the samples
clearly labelled and based their assessment on both sensory quality and on
information they received. In addition to overall quality, respondents were asked
to evaluate whether they were willing to accept the absorbers and buy these
products if they were available on the market.
The oxygen absorber used in the study was a loose sachet enclosed in the
package and half of the respondents also received an information leaflet that
described what the oxygen absorber was, how it functioned and how it could be
disposed of (Mikkola et al., 1997). After the demonstration with real food
products 72% on average were ready to accept these additional sachets, 23%
were unsure and 5% were clearly negative. From those who received the
additional leaflet 76% accepted the oxygen absorber vs. 67% in the no-
information group. Information decreased the number of unsure people among
the respondents but had no effect on the size of the negative group.
556 Novel food packaging techniques
Respondents’ attitudes towards oxygen absorbers were positive (3.8/max 5),
respondents would rather favour than avoid them (3.6/max 5) and evaluated
them more necessary than unnecessary (3.4/max 5) (Mikkola et al., 1997).
Those who were most positive about oxygen absorbers were also positive about
pre-packed food, use of additives and long shelf-life. When asked about the
acceptance of oxygen absorbers in different types of meat products, use in pizza
(62%), meatballs (48%), sausages (37%) were accepted best, while in fresh meat
only 29% would accept them. The high acceptance rate in pizza illustrates the
usefulness of the demonstration material in the study. Consumers could
experience with their own senses what the benefits in pizza were and thus the
acceptance rate is high. The low acceptance rate in fresh meat indicates that an
idea of prolonged shelf-life is not considered as acceptable in fresh products. In
bakery products the highest acceptance rate was again in the product used in the
demonstration, namely rye bread (57%), but all other examples were also
accepted by half of the respondents (50 55%). Furthermore, when asked about
willingness to pay more if the products contained an oxygen absorber, 40% of
the respondents were willing to pay 0.15C= more.
26.4.3 Acceptance of time-temperature indicators
The concept of time-temperature indicators (TTIs) has been well received in
consumer studies (Anon., 1991; Korhonen et al., 1999; Sherlock and Labuza,
1992). In a UK study (Anon., 1991) the majority of respondents (95%; n 511)
considered TTIs as being a good idea because they show whether food is safe
(28%), whether it is kept at the right temperature (21%) and whether food is
fresh (16%). In an American questionnaire study (n 104) 90% considered TTI
tags as a desirable addition and 97% believed that they would increase
confidence in the freshness of the product (Sherlock and Labuza, 1992). The
study was carried out to find out how consumers react to the use of TTIs in
refrigerated dairy products. In a small interview study (n 21) carried out in
Finland by Mikkola et al. (1997) a time-temperature indicator (TTI) created less
uncertainty than an oxygen absorber. Increasing safety was perceived to be an
obvious benefit because consumers do not have to trust merely their own senses.
The suspicion that these indicators may give inaccurate information and thereby
cause a safety hazard was mentioned as a drawback together with adding price
and waste (Anon., 1991; Mikkola et al., 1997). In three focus groups (Sherlock
and Labuza, 1992) run in Nebraska, the TTI tags were considered to be clever
devices that could be used to differentiate products on the market, but they were
not perceived to replace date markers. Furthermore, the discussion brought to
light a need for a consumer campaign before these tags could be used as a
marketing tool, since consumers need to be informed about their benefits.
The TTIs were perceived to be most suitable for frozen food and freshly
prepared refrigerated entre′es, but not dairy products (Sherlock and Labuza,
1992). In a Finnish study (Korhonen et al., 1999) TTIs were regarded as
necessary to most products but the most necessary targets were packaged fresh
Testing consumer responses to new packaging concepts 557
meat or fish, smoked fish, meat products, foods for children or ready prepared
foods. Over 80% regarded TTIs as necessary in these applications although they
were told that TTIs would increase the price of the product by 8.5 cents. This
study was carried out as a survey in which participants (n 460) were asked to
fill in a questionnaire. While responding to the questionnaire consumers could
observe models of TTIs used in packages. Similarly, 59% of the respondents in
the UK expressed their willingness to pay more for chilled products that
contained a TTI tag (Anon., 1991).
The result that TTIs are more suitable for fresh meat (Korhonen et al., 1999),
whereas oxygen absorbers were considered acceptable in fresh meat by only by
a minority of respondents (Mikkola et al., 1997) elevates the importance of
perceived consumer benefit and understanding the reasons for food choices. The
apparently contradictory result may be easily explained by the different
functional principles of these two packaging devices, which may have a
different appeal to consumers. The oxygen absorber could prolong the shelf-life
of fresh meat, whereas the time temperature indicator shows only how it has
been operated through the chill chain. The idea of extending the shelf-life of
fresh meat is not attractive, but it is important to know if the fresh product is still
in prime condition. This highlights the fact that all these different applications
have to be studied as separate concepts in consumer studies. Measuring an
overall attitude towards active and intelligent packaging is not feasible, as the
benefits and possible concerns are specific to each application.
Some worries about possible tampering with TTIs in the shop were brought
forward (Anon., 1991; Korhonen et al., 1999). One worry was that the
shopkeeper could possibly change the indicator and thus mislead consumers. In
the UK (Anon., 1991) the non-cautious respondents perceived the TTIs to the
unnecessary and some reported that they would deliberately sabotage them if
they appeared on the market. The technical reliability of the indicators was also
questioned; other markings should be clear so that consumers would not have to
trust solely the indicator.
In general, people seemed to trust the TTI indicators. When respondents had
to make assessments on the quality of a food product they seemed to place more
trust on the TTI tag than on the date mark (Anon., 1991; Sherlock and Labuza,
1992). A vast majority in a study carried out in the UK (Anon., 1991) said that
they would not buy a product even though the product was not past the best
before mark, if the indicator had changed. If the situation was the other way
around and after the best before date but the indicator showed that the product
was good, about half of the respondents thought it was safe to eat. Over half of
the respondents would use their own judgement to decide whether the food was
edible, a third would adjust the temperature in the fridge and one in five would
throw the food away. In an American study (Sherlock and Labuza, 1992) 80%
would not purchase a product if the date stamp indicated freshness but the TTI
tag had changed. If the situation was the other way around 49% said that they
would not be likely to buy the product. Although respondents seemed to trust the
indicators more, having both date marks and indicators were perceived to be the
558 Novel food packaging techniques
best solution in these studies. In the UK 88% thought both should be on the
package and only about 11% would have been happy with either date mark or
TTI (Anon., 1991). In the USA 75% thought that both should be attached to the
package, but acceptance for the date mark (23%) and TTI tag (24%) were equal
(Sherlock and Labuza, 1992). This may be due partly to the way the question
was asked. In the UK the study respondents had to make choices between the
alternatives, whereas in the American study the questions were asked on
separate rating scales. Therefore the same people could support the self-
sufficiency both of date stamps and TTIs. Having TTIs in the package increased
respondents’ willingness to buy the product by 72% (Sherlock and Labuza,
1992). The date marks and TTIs were regarded as tools that can complement
each other and thus give a better guarantee of product quality (Anon., 1991;
Sherlock and Labuza, 1992).
In the study carried out in the UK (Anon., 1991) the time-temperature
indicators were also regarded as tools to educate consumers on how to keep food
at home. If the product is in prime condition when bought and then the indicator
changes rapidly at home, this may tell the consumer that the product has been
stored in too warm an environment. The indicator would clearly demonstrate to
consumers the need for appropriate practices in handling foods that should be
kept refrigerated.
26.5 Consumers and the future of active and intelligent
packaging
Active and intelligent packaging technology offers several benefits to
consumers. The different absorbers and indicators can be used for various
purposes. The basic purpose is to guarantee that the food products are safe and
keep their quality better. The performance of distinct applications of active and
intelligent packaging is based on several mechanisms: some measure time and
temperature sum, others absorb certain compounds that promote spoilage, and
others, excrete beneficial compounds (Hurme et al., 2002). The technological
possibilities are well ahead of commercial applications, which may be due to
suspicion about consumer attitudes towards these new devices. Consumers tend
to be sensitive about novelty in the food domain, as food ingested and
incorporated in the body could be an unknown substance and a potential source
of risk.
As with all innovations, innovators themselves and early adapters are the first
to adopt them, then acceptance spreads to the majority of the population.
According to Eastlack et al. (1993) adoption happens relatively rapidly for new
packaging solutions. This may be due to the high exposure consumers have to
new packaging solutions during their weekly visits to supermarkets or grocery
stores and the low risk of these products. Nevertheless, to gain success in the
market the new packaging solutions need to provide consumers with benefits or
solutions to their current problems.
Testing consumer responses to new packaging concepts 559
The challenge for new packaging solutions is how they and their benefits are
made familiar to the consumers. Experts and consumers in the few studies that
have been carried out have emphasised the need for information (Anon., 1991;
Mikkola et al., 1997; Sherlock and Labuza, 1992). The tools mentioned were
both product-related information in the stores and packages and wider
campaigns in the media, which is the main source of information for many
(Anon., 1991). A public campaign can explain what the indicators and absorbers
are, what they are used for and what their limitations are. Providing this
information, such as a description of the operating principles, is a basic
requirement but it may often not be sufficient to gain public acceptance. In
written texts the information tends to be on an abstract level and it does not
remove the unfamiliarity of the new applications effectively. Making it possible
to observe what the absorbers and indicators look like, and how they work and
change in different conditions, makes these devices realistic options for
consumers. As the benefits tend to be on the product rather than the package,
consumers need demonstrations with those products that are the target
applications of active and intelligent packaging.
As both information and demonstration are required, the promotion of new
packaging devices needs to done carefully. Although information as such is a
weak motivator for choices (Mikkola et al., 1997), consumers need to know how
the different indicators work, what they tell about the product and also what they
do not tell. The open information policy enables consumers to make their own
decisions whether to buy the products with indicators and assess how
trustworthy they are in different situations. The familiarising process was
described in focus group discussions carried out in the UK (Anon., 1991).
Participants did not know very much about the TTIs before the principles behind
the indicators were explained. The attitude towards indicators turned from
scepticism to something more positive during the group discussion when
different possible benefits and disadvantages were debated.
The few example studies on oxygen absorbers and time-temperature
indicators show that the improved freshness and safety of products are regarded
as real benefits by consumers and the responses to these new packaging tools
have been positive in general. Monitoring the freshness of the product is an
obvious and definite advantage for consumers as it provides better tasting
products for consumers. The improved safety may be a more complex benefit
for consumers, as it is avoidance of a negative effect. Safety in food products is
an attribute that is assumed to be in order if food is sold in the store. Everyone
agrees that safety is a crucial quality factor, but when consumers are asked for
the reasons behind their food choices safety is not typically mentioned
(Lappalainen et al., 1998). Also, emphasising improved safety raises a question
in consumers’ minds about whether the food products have not been safe before.
As was expressed by consumers in the few studies carried out on active and
intelligent packaging, these new techniques may be more beneficial for the food
industry and retailers than consumers, but consumers still have to pay the price
(Anon., 1991). The worries included the fact that the shelf-life of products will
560 Novel food packaging techniques
extend and thus consumers will receive food less fresh than formerly (Mikkola
et al., 1997).
In addition to oxygen absorbers and TTIs, a wide range of absorbers, emitters
and indicators have been developed or are under development (Hurme et al.,
2002). Some of them offer benefits for all actors in the food chain, others to only
some. Leak indicators are developed to detect if modified atmosphere packages
leak and thus the quality and safety of the product is in jeopardy. If damaged
packages can be removed from the shelf before the consumer buys them this will
guarantee better quality for the consumer and improve safety. The drawbacks
are additional cost and waste. The crucial question is how these indicators will
affect the price and who is going to pay. If the price rises, the consumer will be
the final payer but if the indicators are financed through decreased spoilage and
losses the consumer benefit is clear. Ethylene absorbers can keep fruit and
vegetables fresh for longer and reduce waste but some of the compounds used
can be toxic if ingested. Flavour-scalping materials can modify the flavour of the
product, maintain it fresh by absorbing unwanted compounds and by emitting
desired compounds to the product. Some materials are used to mask bitter
flavours in citrus fruit (Hurme et al., 2002). The success of these packaging
solutions will depend on how consumers perceive their benefits and whether
they are willing to pay extra for these.
The existing studies illustrate that asking consumers their attitudes towards
active and intelligent packaging in general bears little relevance to the
acceptance of distinct packaging solutions, since most consumers have only a
vague idea about what different terms mean. Nonetheless, when consumers are
presented with different applications that belong to this category, they can
accurately evaluate the possible benefits these applications can provide for them.
Therefore the acceptance of active and intelligent packaging has to be studied
separately for each application. The general attitude studies and focus group
discussions give an idea of the factors that cause concern among consumers in
packaging issues but the product related responses can reflect these worries to a
varying extent and often differ from general concerns. The realistic examples of
products presented to consumers may help them to evaluate their responses in
relation to other motivations present in food choice situation. Clear
demonstrations also provide information about how the indicators work and
increase trust in them. When something is presented as an abstract idea the
application may sound more technical, distant and also scary than when the real
application can be observeded.
Further development in intelligent and active packaging will provide
completely new benefits to consumers. So far the intelligent packaging concepts
have dealt with the safety and quality aspects of foods. In the future, it is likely
that intelligent and smart tags can contain abundant information about the
product characteristics, the amount of information being now limited by the
available space on the package. Each product can be labelled to provide targeted
information about the origin and composition of the product. The information
may include the nutrient content and possible allergens in the products. Also the
Testing consumer responses to new packaging concepts 561
environmental load of the product and packaging material can be included
together with instructions on how to dispose of the package.
26.6 References
ANON. (1991), Time-temperature indicators: Research into consumer attitudes
and behaviour, MAFF, Food Safety Directorate, UK.
CASEY MA and KRUEGER RA (1994), ‘Focus group interviewing’, in MacFie HJH
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