Litcius/Paper detail

Development and validation of the motivations to Eat Meat Inventory

Christopher J. Hopwood, Jared Piazza, Sophia Chen, Wiebke Bleidorn

2021Appetite50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Previous research suggests that there are four primary motives to eat meat: that it is natural, normal, necessary, or nice. However, these motives have not yet been distinguished empirically; the lack of a measurement tool that can distinguish these motives has contributed to a literature that focuses primarily on meat-eating motivation or justification in general, as opposed to differences between these motives. We developed a 19-item measure, the Motivations to Eat Meat Inventory (MEMI), that fit a four-factor model in three samples (total N = 2175), including one with a large number of vegetarians. Using this instrument, we generated psychological profiles associated with each motive, and showed that the structure and correlates of meat-eating motives is highly similar for omnivores and vegetarians. This research provides a valuable tool for studying variation in psychological motives for eating meat among both meat-eaters and vegetarians and provides an initial framework for understanding the underpinnings of these different motivations.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyOmnivoreFeeding behaviorNiceSocial psychologyEating behaviorComputer scienceMedicineEcologyBiologyPredationObesityInternal medicineProgramming languageAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactAnimal Behavior and Welfare StudiesBehavioral Health and Interventions