MAPP Centre

Welcome to the MAPP Centre – Research on Value Creation in the Food Sector for Consumers, Industry and Society.  

We conduct research that generates insights into people´s perception and behaviour in the agricultural and food system. We study behaviour of stakeholders, customers, and citizen-consumers in the area of food, drink and related services and sectors, and develop implications for industry and public policy.    


VR Retail lab - part of FOODHAY project

The MAPP Centre and the Commercial and Retail Management group have jointly developed the 
VR Retail lab. This was funded by FOODHAY - FOODHAY is the Food and Health Open Laboratory, funded by the Ministry of Higher Education and Science. 


Nordic-Baltic consumer sustainability understanding in a food context 

Four colleagues of the MAPP Centre have studied Food sustainability understanding in the Nordic-Baltic region, through a representative, cross-country survey, to serve as a basis for a labelling framework in Europe. The report can be found here https://pub.norden.org/temanord2023-530/ - or see this video for a breakdown of core findings:  


Citizen-consumer understanding of upcycling in the food system 

In the PlantPro project, MAPP Centre has amongst others explored citizen-consumer understanding and perception of ‘upcycling’ as a concept and through the resulting products. See how this was done, and a glimpse of the reasons and reactions, in this video: 


Biotech meets the consumer plate: When microbes make food - what do consumers think about precision fermentation?

From biotech breakthroughs to future foods, the EIT Food project "Precision Fermentation: From Biotechnology to Sustainable Nutrition" explored how consumers understand this emerging technology and its potential for sustainable nutrition.

Watch the video to discover what consumers really think , and what the project revealed.


MAPP publications

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Aschemann-Witzel, J., Christensen, A. & Grønhøj, A. (2012). Business school students and sustainability: Attitudes and behaviours of students signed up to a sustainability specialty as compared to their peers. In V. Fricke, U. Schrader & V. W. Thoresen (Eds.), BEYOND CONSUMPTION Pathways to Responsible Living - CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, 2nd PERL International Conference 2012 (Vol. 2012, pp. 336-346). The Partnership for Education and Research about Responsible Living. http://www.perlprojects.org/content/download/42594/464394/file/PERL%20Conference%20Proceedings%202012%203MB[1].pdf
Liao, L., Corsi, A., Lockshin, L. & Chrysochou, P. (2012). Can packaging elements elicit consumers’ emotional responses?. Paper presented at 41st EMAC Annual Conference , Lisbon, Portugal. http://www.emac2012.org/r/home
Fischer , A. R. H., van Trijp , H. C. M., Hofenk, , D., Ronteltap, A. & Tudoran, A. A. (2012). Collation of Scientific Evidence on Consumer Acceptance of New Food Technologies: Three roads to consumer choice. Aarhus University, School of Business and Social Sciences, MAPP Centre.
Thøgersen, J., Jørgensen, A.-K. & Sandager, S. (2012). Consumer decision making regarding a "green" everyday product. Psychology & Marketing, 29(4), 187–197. https://doi.org/10.1002/mar.20514