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1.
Food Res Int ; 92: 79-87, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28290300

ABSTRACT

Temporal Dominance of Sensations (TDS) and Temporal Check-all-that-apply (TCATA) are two multi-attribute methods for dynamic sensory characterization. Previous research has shown that both methodologies provide complementary information. However, it remains an open question which of the two approaches better explains consumers' hedonic perception of products. In this context, the aim of the present work was to compare TDS and TCATA in terms of their ability to identify the influence of the dynamic sensory profile of food products on consumer overall liking scores. Two consumer studies were conducted using two different product categories (French bread and vanilla milk desserts). In each study, a between-subjects design was used to obtain dynamic sensory profiles using TDS and TCATA. After the dynamic sensory characterization tasks consumers rated their liking using a 9-point hedonic scale. Across the two studies, both methodologies provided similar information on the main drivers of liking and disliking, particularly when samples showed clear differences in liking. However, in one of the studies attribute applicability from TCATA provided additional insights on the influence of the dynamics of the sensory characteristics of products on consumers' liking. Results of the present work stress the complementarity between TCATA and TDS and highlight the potentiality of TCATA to provide a more detailed description of the dynamics of sensory perception during consumption.


Subject(s)
Food Preferences , Olfactory Perception , Taste Perception , Adolescent , Adult , Bread , Chocolate , Choice Behavior , Consumer Behavior , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
2.
Food Res Int ; 78: 369-377, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28433305

ABSTRACT

Designing satiating food is not an easy task. Food reformulation is normally done by altering the proportion of basic ingredients or by adding new minor ingredients. In general, the texture varies concomitantly with these changes, altering the way the food is processed orally and the complete eating experience. This highlights the interest of discovering how variations in minor ingredients influence texture and how this affects the dynamics of the oral trajectory. Six cheese pie formulations were prepared: basic recipe (Base), no egg (-Egg), no corn starch (-Corn starch) no sugar (-Sugar), added diary cream (+Cream) and extra skimmed milk powder (+Milk powder). Temporal dominance of sensations was used to show that the appearance and disappearance of each texture sensation dominance experienced in the mouth during the eating process differed among the six pies, as did their relation to the consumers' expectation of satiating capacity scores and to the changes in composition. Two extreme behaviors were found: suppression of egg/addition of extra milk powder made the pies initially drier and harder, while suppression of corn starch/addition of cream gave the samples a soft, moist early sensation. The former elicited higher expectations of satiating capacity. In addition, overall liking, liking evolving with time (dynamic liking) and the level of several key texture attributes' divergence from those of an "ideal" cheese pie were evaluated on bipolar just-about-right scales and through penalty analysis to gain insights into potential directions for reformulating acceptable pies.

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