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Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation

This study, which was conducted as part of the Italian Taste project, was aimed at exploring the relationship between actual liking and sensory perception in four food models. Each food model was spiked with four levels of prototypical tastant (i.e., citric acid, sucrose, sodium chloride, capsaicin)...

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Autores principales: Endrizzi, Isabella, Cliceri, Danny, Menghi, Leonardo, Aprea, Eugenio, Charles, Mathilde, Monteleone, Erminio, Dinnella, Caterina, Spinelli, Sara, Pagliarini, Ella, Laureati, Monica, Torri, Luisa, Bendini, Alessandra, Toschi, Tullia Gallina, Sinesio, Fiorella, Predieri, Stefano, Gasperi, Flavia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8750454/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35010132
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11010005
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author Endrizzi, Isabella
Cliceri, Danny
Menghi, Leonardo
Aprea, Eugenio
Charles, Mathilde
Monteleone, Erminio
Dinnella, Caterina
Spinelli, Sara
Pagliarini, Ella
Laureati, Monica
Torri, Luisa
Bendini, Alessandra
Toschi, Tullia Gallina
Sinesio, Fiorella
Predieri, Stefano
Gasperi, Flavia
author_facet Endrizzi, Isabella
Cliceri, Danny
Menghi, Leonardo
Aprea, Eugenio
Charles, Mathilde
Monteleone, Erminio
Dinnella, Caterina
Spinelli, Sara
Pagliarini, Ella
Laureati, Monica
Torri, Luisa
Bendini, Alessandra
Toschi, Tullia Gallina
Sinesio, Fiorella
Predieri, Stefano
Gasperi, Flavia
author_sort Endrizzi, Isabella
collection PubMed
description This study, which was conducted as part of the Italian Taste project, was aimed at exploring the relationship between actual liking and sensory perception in four food models. Each food model was spiked with four levels of prototypical tastant (i.e., citric acid, sucrose, sodium chloride, capsaicin) to elicit a target sensation (TS) at an increasing perceived intensity. Participants (N = 2258; 59% women, aged 18–60) provided demographic information, a stated liking for 40 different foods/beverages, and their responsiveness to tastants in water. A food-specific Pearson’s coefficient was calculated individually to estimate the relationship between actual liking and TS responsiveness. Considering the relationship magnitude, consumers were grouped into four food-specific clusters, depending on whether they showed a strong negative (SNC), a weak negative (WNC), a weak positive (WPC), or a strong positive correlation (SPC). Overall, the degree of liking raised in parallel with sweetness responsiveness, fell as sourness and pungency perception increased, and showed an inverted U-shape relationship with saltiness. The SNC clusters generally perceived TSs at higher intensities, except for sourness. Clusters were validated by associating the level of stated liking towards food/beverages; however, some unexpected indications emerged: adding sugar to coffee or preferring spicy foods differentiated those presenting positive correlations from those showing negative correlations. Our findings constitute a step towards a more comprehensive understanding of food preferences.
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spelling pubmed-87504542022-01-12 Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation Endrizzi, Isabella Cliceri, Danny Menghi, Leonardo Aprea, Eugenio Charles, Mathilde Monteleone, Erminio Dinnella, Caterina Spinelli, Sara Pagliarini, Ella Laureati, Monica Torri, Luisa Bendini, Alessandra Toschi, Tullia Gallina Sinesio, Fiorella Predieri, Stefano Gasperi, Flavia Foods Article This study, which was conducted as part of the Italian Taste project, was aimed at exploring the relationship between actual liking and sensory perception in four food models. Each food model was spiked with four levels of prototypical tastant (i.e., citric acid, sucrose, sodium chloride, capsaicin) to elicit a target sensation (TS) at an increasing perceived intensity. Participants (N = 2258; 59% women, aged 18–60) provided demographic information, a stated liking for 40 different foods/beverages, and their responsiveness to tastants in water. A food-specific Pearson’s coefficient was calculated individually to estimate the relationship between actual liking and TS responsiveness. Considering the relationship magnitude, consumers were grouped into four food-specific clusters, depending on whether they showed a strong negative (SNC), a weak negative (WNC), a weak positive (WPC), or a strong positive correlation (SPC). Overall, the degree of liking raised in parallel with sweetness responsiveness, fell as sourness and pungency perception increased, and showed an inverted U-shape relationship with saltiness. The SNC clusters generally perceived TSs at higher intensities, except for sourness. Clusters were validated by associating the level of stated liking towards food/beverages; however, some unexpected indications emerged: adding sugar to coffee or preferring spicy foods differentiated those presenting positive correlations from those showing negative correlations. Our findings constitute a step towards a more comprehensive understanding of food preferences. MDPI 2021-12-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8750454/ /pubmed/35010132 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11010005 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Endrizzi, Isabella
Cliceri, Danny
Menghi, Leonardo
Aprea, Eugenio
Charles, Mathilde
Monteleone, Erminio
Dinnella, Caterina
Spinelli, Sara
Pagliarini, Ella
Laureati, Monica
Torri, Luisa
Bendini, Alessandra
Toschi, Tullia Gallina
Sinesio, Fiorella
Predieri, Stefano
Gasperi, Flavia
Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation
title Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation
title_full Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation
title_fullStr Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation
title_full_unstemmed Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation
title_short Relationships between Intensity and Liking for Chemosensory Stimuli in Food Models: A Large-Scale Consumer Segmentation
title_sort relationships between intensity and liking for chemosensory stimuli in food models: a large-scale consumer segmentation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8750454/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35010132
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11010005
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