ABSTRACT.
A lexicon of terms to describe desirable as well as undesirable flavors in peanuts has been developed. The lexicon and an intensity rating scale was developed by a 13 member panel of flavor and peanut specialists representing industry and the USDA‐Agricultural Research Service. This system is intended to provide definitive, common terminology for use in communicating differences in peanut flavor variables among all phases of peanut research and industry.
ABSTRACT.
Understanding the tactile feel of paper, nonwoven, and woven products requires a valid and reliable sensory evaluation method which discriminates and describes handfeel properties. The Handfeel Spectrum Descriptive Analysis method separates the sensory tactile properties of paper and fabrics into clearly defined characteristics that are based on sound physical properties. The benefit of using a trained descriptive sensory panel is that resulting analytical sensory data allow full documentation of a sample's sensory tactile properties that can be related to consumer responses and instrumental physical tests. This benefit derives from strict protocols for manipulation and the use of precisely defined terms to discriminate and describe the qualitative properties (characteristics) and their relative intensities (strength) in each product. This paper discusses in detail the protocols for (1) sample preparation, presentation, and handling during evaluation, (2) the definition and scale range for each sensory attribute/characteristic and (3) the application of these data to address business and technical situations with consumer products.
Two independent, highly trained panels separately conducted descriptive analysis of orange juices using different descriptive analysis methods and sets of samples. Lexicons were developed independently. One panel evaluated 23 orange juice products and identified and referenced 24 attributes. The other panel evaluated 17 products and identified 17 attributes for testing. Though not identical, the lexicons developed by both panels were similar overall. To compare the sensory space of the product category, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and sensory maps were developed separately for each panel. The comparison showed that the underlying sample spaces obtained from both panels were comparable in many ways. Key flavor characteristics for the same types of orange juice products were described similarly by both panels. These data indicate that the process of using highly trained panels that define attributes and use reference standards for descriptive sensory analysis can give objective and comparable information for a product category across different panels.
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