Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

< Back to Article

Fig 1.

(1A) Examples of Non-Directive labels (1B) Examples of Semi- directive FOPs (1C) Examples of Directive FOPs.

More »

Fig 1 Expand

Table 1.

Participant Characteristics.

More »

Table 1 Expand

Fig 2.

(2A) Principle display panels (PDP for the four brands of cereal (top row) and four brands of crackers (middle row) that were created (in the form of packages) for the experiment. (2B) PDP of a single brand of cereal depicted at high and low levels of health which include the corresponding traffic light labels. (2C) Illustration of the standard Nutrition Facts Panel (NFP) that appears on the panel immediately to the right of the PDP on cereal boxes.

More »

Fig 2 Expand

Fig 3.

Plots the percentage of each type of nutritional label that has been fixated as a function of viewing time.

Data were collapsed across participants so the percentage was based on the number of labels fixated out of the 220 total labels per label type (4 labels x 55 participants)

More »

Fig 3 Expand

Fig 4.

Estimated mean total eye-gaze time spent on the Nutrition Facts Panel for cereal and cracker packages that did and did not include an FOP label.

A 2-way interaction was apparent between product type and whether an FOP label was present or not, P<0.05.)

More »

Fig 4 Expand

Fig 5.

Estimated number of visual hits on the Nutrition Facts Panel for cereal and cracker packages that did and did not include an FOP label.

A 2-way interaction was apparent between product type and whether an FOP label was present or not. a,b P<0.05

More »

Fig 5 Expand