2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2019.10.029
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A validated survey to measure household food waste

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Cited by 50 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…questionnaires directly aimed at measuring the amount of wasted food (e.g., van Herpen, van Geffen, et al, 2019), and questionnaires assessing the frequency of behaviours that lead to food waste (e.g., Misiak et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…questionnaires directly aimed at measuring the amount of wasted food (e.g., van Herpen, van Geffen, et al, 2019), and questionnaires assessing the frequency of behaviours that lead to food waste (e.g., Misiak et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first category, although much less complicated and less expensive than direct observations, may result in biased estimates of the amount of wasted food due to underreporting caused by social desirability bias along with difficulty in recollecting the memories of the amount of wasted food (Jörissen et al, 2015). To improve the quality of direct self-reports, researchers have to pre-announce the survey several days before the actual study and specify detailed product categories to facilitate the recall (van Herpen, van Geffen, et al, 2019). Also, these types of measures assess the consumer food waste on a household level-these are not suitable to assess the amount of food waste produced by a single person, which limits the possibility of testing the hypotheses regarding individual factors (e.g., psychological), that may affect food wasting behaviours.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Understanding Why Consumers Do Not Eat the Food They Acquire | 29 Moreover, each measurement method to measure the amount of food wasted has its own peculiarities (Table 2.1). Weighing and garbage collection provide the most objective and accurate information on food waste (Van Herpen et al 2019b;Xue et al 2017), but these methods are time-consuming and expensive, and are impractical to apply to a large sample of households (Van Herpen et al 2019b). Other types of measurement methods, such as keeping kitchen diaries and records, are less time-consuming and expensive but depend largely on personal perceptions and the observer's subjectivity, which may reduce the accuracy of the data.…”
Section: Investigating and Measuring Consumer Food Wastementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other types of measurement methods, such as keeping kitchen diaries and records, are less time-consuming and expensive but depend largely on personal perceptions and the observer's subjectivity, which may reduce the accuracy of the data. Survey measures can be subject to social desirability (Van Herpen et al 2019b), and directly asking consumers about their waste behavior may make them more conscious of their behavior (Parizeau, von Massow, and Martin 2015), possibly leading to underreporting of the amount of food wasted (Neff, Spiker, and Truant 2015;Van der Werf et al 2019). Questionnaires are useful when the aim is to investigate consumer attitudes and effects of household-specific characteristics or to investigate differences between households and within households across time rather than attempting to accurately estimate the amount of food waste (Van Herpen et al 2019b;Yu and Jaenicke 2020).…”
Section: Investigating and Measuring Consumer Food Wastementioning
confidence: 99%
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