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文章标签 ‘Perception’

期刊Food Quality and Preference介绍

2007年6月7日 没有评论

Food Quality and Preference,2005影响因子1.358(数据来源,Impact factor of this journal,期刊影响因子查询办法见:如何快速查询外文期刊的影响因子),主要出版研究、重点评论及具有实践特性文章和最新评论等。期刊也刊载针对某一重要时事问题的特约评论文章,主要包括感官及消费科学以及感官评价方法。所有这些文章的目的是抹平研究者和应用者之间的鸿沟,使文章作者和读者在消费者和市场研究中达到一致。刊载的主要研究内容包括:感官科学,sensometrics及感官评价,营养及食品的选择以及食品研究、产品研发及其感官质量的保证方法。分述如下: 阅读全文…

Sensory analysis

2007年4月29日 1 条评论

Sensory analysis

Sensory analysis (or sensory evaluation) is a scientific discipline that applies principles of experimental design and statistical analysis to the use of human senses (sight, smell, taste, touch and hearing) for the purposes of evaluating consumer products. The discipline requires panels of human assessors, on whom the products are tested, and recording the responses made by them. By applying statistical techniques to the results it is possible to make inferences and insights about the products under test. Most large consumer goods companies have departments dedicated to sensory analysis.

Sensory analysis can generally be broken down into three sub-sections:

* Effective testing (dealing with objective facts about products)
* Affective testing (dealing with subjective facts such as preferences)
* Perception (the biochemical and psychological aspects of sensation)
Effective testing

This type of testing is concerned with obtaining objective facts about products. This could range from basic discrimination testing (e.g. Do two or more products differ from each other?) to descriptive profiling (e.g. What are the characteristics of two or more products?). The type of panel required for this type of testing would normally be a trained panel.

Affective testing

Otherwise known as consumer testing, this type of testing is concerned with obtaining subjective data, or how well products are likely to be accepted. Usually large (50 or more) panels of untrained personnel are recruited for this type of testing, although smaller focus groups can be utilised to gain insights into products. The range of testing can vary from simple comparative testing (e.g. Which do you prefer, A or B?) to structured questioning regarding the magnitude of acceptance of individual characteristics (e.g. Please rate the “fruity aroma”: dislike|neither|like).

Perception

Perception involves the biochemical and psychological theories relating to human (and animal) sensations. By understanding the mechanisms involved it may be possible to explain why certain characteristics are preferred over others.

Descriptive analysis involves trained panels (6-30 people) who evaluate products by rating the intensity of various characteristics on a scale. Statistical analyses are applied to look for differences among various products for characteristics of interest.

Consumer testing (sometimes called ‘hedonic testing’) involves having potential consumers of a product evaluate various products and a small number of items on a ballot.