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Science of Sensory Analysis Measuring Flavour

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Title: Science of Sensory Analysis Measuring Flavour


1
Science of Sensory AnalysisMeasuring Flavour
  • John R. Piggott
  • Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical
    Sciences
  • University of Strathclyde
  • Glasgow
  • Scotland
  • j.r.piggott_at_strath.ac.uk

2
What is flavour?
  • Perception of the flavour arises from integration
    or interplay of signals produced as a consequence
    of sensing aroma, taste and chemesthesis from a
    food or beverage (Laing et al., 1996)
  • The psychological interpretation of a
    physiological response to a physical stimulus
    (Noble, 1996)

3
Flavour is
  • Flavour is an interaction of food and
    consumer (von Sydow, 1971)
  • Therefore sensory methods must be used to measure
    flavour (and all other sensory characteristics)
  • However, physical/chemical methods, if properly
    validated by sensory tests, are often cheaper and
    more efficient

4
The Human Senses
  • Traditionally five senses
  • Sight Visual
  • Hearing Auditory
  • Taste Gustatory
  • Smell Olfactory
  • Touch Cutaneous
  • Touch can be divided into many separate systems
    or modalities

5
Sight
  • Stimulus radiant energy of wavelength 10-6
    to 10-7 m (visible light)
  • Receptor rods and cones in retina
  • Experience hue, brightness

6
Hearing
  • Stimulus mechanical vibrations of 20 -
    20,000 Hz
  • Receptor hair cells in Organ of Corti
  • Experience pitch, loudness

7
Taste
  • Stimulus chemicals in liquid solution
  • Receptor taste buds
  • Experience tastes (sweet, salt, sour, bitter)

8
Smell
  • Stimulus chemicals in gaseous solution
  • Receptor olfactory cells in upper nasal
    cavity
  • Experience odour

9
Touch
  • Stimulus mechanical pressure
  • Receptor cells in skin
  • Experience contact

10
Touch temperature
  • Stimulus temperature changes
  • Receptor cells in skin
  • Experience warmth, cold

11
Touch pain
  • Stimulus extreme energy of any kind
  • Receptor free nerve endings
  • Experience pain

12
Kinesthetic sense
  • Stimulus mechanical pressure
  • Receptor cells in tendons, muscles, joints
  • Experience movement

13
Vestibular
  • Stimulus movement of head
  • Receptor cells in semi-circular canals
  • Experience balance, equilibrium

14
Organic
  • Stimulus chemical or mechanical action
  • Receptor cells in viscera
  • Experience pressure, visceral disturbance
    (hunger, nausea)

15
Taste
  • Simpler response than smell
  • A small number of basic tastes

16
Basic tastes
  • Sweet sugars
  • Salt sodium chloride
  • Sour acids
  • Bitter quinine, caffeine
  • Umami mono-sodium glutamate
  • Other oral sensations
  • Spiciness - not really a taste
  • Astringency - not really a taste

17
Smell
  • No agreed primary odours (basic smells)
  • Molecular work suggests several hundred
    receptors

18
Flavour release in the mouth
Odour perception
Respiratory air flow
Taste perception
Adsorption
Partition equilibrium
B
c
A
Delahunty et al., 1996
19
Sensory analysis
  • a scientific method used to evoke, measure,
    analyze, and interpret those responses to
    products as perceived through the senses of
    sight, smell, touch, taste, and hearing (Lawless
    Heymann, 1998)

20
Sensory analysis is
  • about using a group of trained tasters,
  • following a specified procedure,
  • to tell you about the taste, smell, texture
  • of a product sample

21
Sensory analysis is not
  • subjective
  • about product experts
  • about market or consumer research

22
Sensory analysis can tell you
  • what a product does (or does not) taste like
  • Sensory analysis can not tell you
  • whether your customers will like the product
  • for that, you need to ask them

23
Sensory analysis is
  • trained tasters (assessors, panellists)
  • Roughly speaking, the more the better
  • Selected as competent
  • being used as measuring instruments
  • Unlike, say, a thermometer they can have opinions
  • Procedures must be designed to eliminate the
    effect of their opinions

24
Sensory analysis is
  • specified procedure
  • discrimination/difference tests
  • descriptive analysis
  • affective/hedonic test methods

25
Discrimination/difference tests
  • Are these two samples different?
  • Unfortunately that question does not work
  • Is this batch different from the usual?
  • Will the customers notice that it is different?
  • Does the difference matter?

26
Descriptive analysis
  • What do these samples taste like?
  • How salty (sour, pungent, ) are they?
  • How are they different?
  • How is my product different from others on the
    market?
  • What do the customers want?

27
Measuring and scaling
  • Anyone can measure the strength of a taste or
    smell,
  • if they know exactly what it is
  • People are (generally) good at tastes and colours

28
(No Transcript)
29
Affective/hedonic methods
  • Do you like this?
  • How much do you like it?
  • Which of these do you prefer?
  • Market segmentation different products for
  • Different people
  • Different uses

30
Flavour profile demonstration
  • Describe the orange juice samples
  • Use some or all the words suggested, or add your
    own
  • Words you use must be used for all the samples
  • Score each word, for each sample, from 0 (absent)
    to 5 (very much)
  • Do the samples in random order
  • not 1 6 or 6 1
  • My statistics will then try to make sense of it
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