Member Sign In ►

Institute For The Future

  • What We Do
    • Who We Are
    • Foresight Toolkit
    • History of the Future
    • Events
    • In the News
    • Media Center
  • Our Work
    • Featured Projects
    • Global Landscape
    • People + Technology
    • Body + Mind
  • IFTF + You
    • Collaborations
    • Programs
    • Clients + Sponsors
    • Make the Future
    • Online Store
    • Jobs
    • Contact Us
  • Future Now
Facebook Page Twitter Page RSS Page
  • Global Landscape
  • People + Technology
  • Body + Mind

The Future of Nutrition: Consumers Engage with Science

  • Featured Projects
  • Global Landscape

    • Ten-Year Forecast

    • Global Food Outlook

    • Socialstructing

    • Human Settlement

    • Catalysts for Change

    • Work

    • Sustainability

    • Cooperation

    • Learning

    • Governance

  • People + Technology

    • Technology Horizons

    • Mobile Realities

    • Automation + Robots

    • Fabbing + Hacking

    • Open Science

    • Energy

    • Neurotechnology

    • Biofutures

    • Games

    • The Human Internet

  • Body + Mind

    • Health Horizons

    • Well-being

    • Health Care

    • Health Information

    • Health Games

    • Open Health

    • Aging

INTERESTED IN WORKING WITH IFTF?

Contact us today »


Future NOW Blog

Global Food Outlook Virtual Exchange

Mar 19, 2013

The Coming Age of Networked Matter

Mar 05, 2013

Checking-in to Well-being

Mar 04, 2013

Shanzhai: An Open Platform for Innovation at SXSW

Feb 27, 2013

What a New Measure of Sensitivity Suggests about Future Health Interventions

Feb 26, 2013

Browse all blog posts »

The Future of Nutrition: Consumers Engage with Science

The genomics revolution will forever transform the foods of the future and the ways they are produced and purchased. Specifically, advances in the emerging field of nutrigenomics promise a new understanding of the connections between food and human health at the molecular level. This new knowledge will give a growing number of sophisticated consumers the desire and know-how to mitigate or even prevent the onset of diseases to which they may be predisposed. In response, companies in the food industry will use this knowledge to produce and sell a whole new range of value-added products to an increasing share of consumers.

By 2010, we will come to know more about how particular foods interact with our genetic predispositions to such diseases as cancer, heart disease, and obesity—three of the major causes of death in the United States. Companies in the food industry will be able to leverage this knowledge by offering new foods—foods that will enable sophisticated consumers to increase their longevity and live healthier lives simply by changing and monitoring their diets.

 

Publication Date

2001

Download

  • SR-731_The_Future_of_Nutrition.pdf

    The Future of Nutrition: Consumers Engage with Science [SR-731]

  • Institute for the Future

  • 124 University Avenue
  • Palo Alto, CA 94301
  • 650.854.6322
  • info@iftf.org

  • © 2013 Institute for the Future

    What We Do

  • Who We Are
  • Foresight Toolkit
  • History of the Future
  • Events
  • In the News
  • Media Center

    Our Work

  • Featured Projects
  • Global Landscape
  • People + Technology
  • Body + Mind

    IFTF + You

  • Collaborations
  • Programs
  • Clients + Sponsors
  • Make the Future
  • Online Store
  • Jobs
  • Contact Us

    Future Now