Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours

This research project fully defines and evaluates a new approach in sensory omission testing, based on the same-different test (ASTM E2139-05 2011) and the Thurstonian measure d′. The applications of this new approach were investigated to fully characterise sweet and savoury flav...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Delime, Perrine
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29393/
_version_ 1848793775535554560
author Delime, Perrine
author_facet Delime, Perrine
author_sort Delime, Perrine
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This research project fully defines and evaluates a new approach in sensory omission testing, based on the same-different test (ASTM E2139-05 2011) and the Thurstonian measure d′. The applications of this new approach were investigated to fully characterise sweet and savoury flavour models and to investigate interactions between flavour compounds. Panels of naïve assessors conducted a series of omission tests using both a strawberry (9 volatiles) and a savoury (10 volatiles) flavour model. Using the Thurstonian d′ as a measure of the sensitivity of the discrimination test, results showed that the new approach using the same-different test was more sensitive compared to the more traditional approach using the triangle test: the d′ values obtained using the same-different test were 1.2 to 3.5 times higher than the d′ values obtained using the triangle test. It was hypothesised that the evaluation of three samples in the triangle test generated additional noise related to carry-over, sensory fatigue and memory effects. In particular, the triangle test requires that the three successive stimulus sensations are stored into memory until the discrimination test has been completed. The same-different approach was then successfully applied to (i) determine the relative importance of individual volatiles in ortho- and retronasal flavours (ii) assess interactions between volatiles in mixtures, and (iii) investigate interactions between congruent tastes and aromas in flavours. Results showed that cis-3-hexen-1-ol, 4-hydroxy-2,5-dimethyl-3-furanone and ethyl butanoate play a key role in the strawberry flavour, while sulfur compounds play a major role in the savoury flavour. For both the sweet and the savoury flavours, orthonasal perception was more sensitive to the removal of individual volatiles and this was attributed to different efficiency in delivery to the olfactory receptors. The same-different approach highlighted synergistic, suppressive and blending interactions between volatiles within flavour mixtures. In particular, the presence of 4-hydroxy-2,5-dimethyl-3-furanone increased the assessor sensitivity to the removal of other individual volatiles in the savoury flavour. Cross-modal interactions were highlighted within the strawberry flavour, particularly where congruency between taste and aroma could be identified. The omission approach brings a novel contribution to sensory science as it allows further analyses and a deeper understanding of flavour. This study pioneers the use of the Thurstonian d′ for omission experiments, enabling the relative importance of the individual components of flavour perception to be determined.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:05:39Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-29393
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:05:39Z
publishDate 2015
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-293932025-02-28T11:36:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29393/ Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours Delime, Perrine This research project fully defines and evaluates a new approach in sensory omission testing, based on the same-different test (ASTM E2139-05 2011) and the Thurstonian measure d′. The applications of this new approach were investigated to fully characterise sweet and savoury flavour models and to investigate interactions between flavour compounds. Panels of naïve assessors conducted a series of omission tests using both a strawberry (9 volatiles) and a savoury (10 volatiles) flavour model. Using the Thurstonian d′ as a measure of the sensitivity of the discrimination test, results showed that the new approach using the same-different test was more sensitive compared to the more traditional approach using the triangle test: the d′ values obtained using the same-different test were 1.2 to 3.5 times higher than the d′ values obtained using the triangle test. It was hypothesised that the evaluation of three samples in the triangle test generated additional noise related to carry-over, sensory fatigue and memory effects. In particular, the triangle test requires that the three successive stimulus sensations are stored into memory until the discrimination test has been completed. The same-different approach was then successfully applied to (i) determine the relative importance of individual volatiles in ortho- and retronasal flavours (ii) assess interactions between volatiles in mixtures, and (iii) investigate interactions between congruent tastes and aromas in flavours. Results showed that cis-3-hexen-1-ol, 4-hydroxy-2,5-dimethyl-3-furanone and ethyl butanoate play a key role in the strawberry flavour, while sulfur compounds play a major role in the savoury flavour. For both the sweet and the savoury flavours, orthonasal perception was more sensitive to the removal of individual volatiles and this was attributed to different efficiency in delivery to the olfactory receptors. The same-different approach highlighted synergistic, suppressive and blending interactions between volatiles within flavour mixtures. In particular, the presence of 4-hydroxy-2,5-dimethyl-3-furanone increased the assessor sensitivity to the removal of other individual volatiles in the savoury flavour. Cross-modal interactions were highlighted within the strawberry flavour, particularly where congruency between taste and aroma could be identified. The omission approach brings a novel contribution to sensory science as it allows further analyses and a deeper understanding of flavour. This study pioneers the use of the Thurstonian d′ for omission experiments, enabling the relative importance of the individual components of flavour perception to be determined. 2015-07-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29393/1/Thesis_Perrine_DELIME.pdf Delime, Perrine (2015) Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. omission testing sweet and savoury flavour orthonasal retronasal inter modal interactions taste aroma
spellingShingle omission testing
sweet and savoury flavour
orthonasal
retronasal
inter modal interactions
taste
aroma
Delime, Perrine
Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
title Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
title_full Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
title_fullStr Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
title_full_unstemmed Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
title_short Improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
title_sort improved omission testing for understanding the relative contribution of volatiles and tastants to sweet and savoury flavours
topic omission testing
sweet and savoury flavour
orthonasal
retronasal
inter modal interactions
taste
aroma
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29393/