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| Best-Worst Scaling of Food Values× | NOVA Food Classification× | |
|---|---|---|
| المجال | Food Agriculture Studies | Food Agriculture Studies |
| العائلة | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| سنة النشأة≠ | 2009 | 2019 |
| صاحب الطريقة≠ | Jayson L. Lusk & Brian C. Briggeman (food values application); Adam Finn & Jordan Louviere (BWS method) | Carlos A. Monteiro and colleagues (University of Sao Paulo) |
| النوع≠ | Maximum-difference choice-based scaling pipeline for food values | Food-processing classification pipeline for diet and food-system analysis |
| المصدر التأسيسي≠ | Lusk, J. L., & Briggeman, B. C. (2009). Food Values. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 91(1), 184-196. DOI ↗ | Monteiro, C. A., Cannon, G., Levy, R. B., Moubarac, J.-C., Louzada, M. L. C., Rauber, F., Khandpur, N., Cediel, G., Neri, D., Martinez-Steele, E., Baraldi, L. G., & Jaime, P. C. (2019). Ultra-processed foods: what they are and how to identify them. Public Health Nutrition, 22(5), 936-941. DOI ↗ |
| الأسماء البديلة | Food Values Best-Worst Scaling, MaxDiff Scaling of Food Values, Lusk-Briggeman Food Values, Best-Worst Food Preference Elicitation | NOVA, NOVA classification, Ultra-Processed Food Classification, NOVA food processing classification |
| ذات صلة≠ | 3 | 4 |
| الملخص≠ | Best-worst scaling of food values measures how much consumers care about a fixed set of food attributes — safety, price, taste, nutrition, naturalness, origin, environmental impact, fairness, and so on — by repeatedly asking them to pick the most and least important value from small subsets. Jayson Lusk and Brian Briggeman's 2009 article 'Food Values' introduced this specific application, adapting the best-worst (maximum-difference) scaling method that Finn and Louviere pioneered for food-safety research. Rather than rating each value on a 1-to-5 scale, where everything tends to look important, respondents are forced to trade values off against one another, yielding a discriminating, interval-scaled ranking of what truly drives their food choices and avoiding the scale-use biases that plague conventional importance ratings. | The NOVA classification groups foods not by their nutrient content but by the nature, extent, and purpose of the industrial processing they undergo, sorting all items into four groups: unprocessed or minimally processed foods, processed culinary ingredients, processed foods, and ultra-processed foods. Developed by Carlos Monteiro and colleagues at the University of Sao Paulo, NOVA introduced ultra-processed foods (UPF) as a category — industrial formulations made largely from substances extracted from foods plus additives — and argued that this processing dimension, rather than nutrient profile alone, is central to diet and health. The 2019 paper Ultra-processed foods: what they are and how to identify them gives the operational definitions, and the share of dietary energy from ultra-processed foods has become a widely used exposure in nutrition and food-system research. |
| ScholarGateمجموعة البيانات ↗ |
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