“…Other studies with children which reinforce this view include those by Guthrie, Rapoport, and Wardle (2000), who found that 3-to 5-year-old children gave the most reliable data on food preferences when real foods were the stimuli compared to plastic models of the foods or photographs, Kroll (1990), who found that a child-oriented verbal scale was more appropriate than a hedonic or face scale for discrimination of the sweetness of an orange beverage, and James (1996), who reported that ranking was inappropriate with 8-to 9-year-olds for discriminating levels of sweetness, saltiness, sourness, or bitterness in taste mixtures. On the other hand, Leon, Couronne, Marcuz, and Koster (1999) obtained similar satisfactory results using a paired comparison method, ranking by elimination or hedonic categorization to measure children's food preferences, as did Sjovall, Fogh, Huitfeldt, Karlsson, and Nylen (1984) using a hedonic category scale and facial scale.…”