Pole selection in Polarized Sensory Positioning: insights from the cognitive aspects behind the task

Gastón Ares, Lucía Antúnez, Denize Oliveira, Florencia Alcaire, Ana Giménez, Ingunn Berget, Tormod Næs, Paula Varela

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Polarized Sensory Positioning (PSP) is a relatively new methodology for sensory characterization, based on the comparison of samples to reference products, usually called poles. The key step in the implementation of this methodology is the selection of the poles. In this context, the aim of the present work was to gain insights on the strategies used by consumers to complete this task and to study the influence of the number and characteristics of the poles on results from PSP. Three consumer studies were carried out, on three product categories: chocolate-flavored milks, vanilla milk desserts and orange-flavored powdered drinks. In each study, three groups of consumers (. n=. 40) evaluated samples using one of three sets of two or three poles. After the PSP task consumers indicated how they evaluated the degree of difference between the samples and the poles, and listed the sensory characteristics of the poles they took into account for the evaluation. Consumers tended to evaluate the degree of difference between the samples and each of the poles by evaluating the intensity of one or two main sensory characteristics. Sample configurations obtained using two and three poles did not largely differ, especially when the poles clearly represented the sensory characteristics responsible for the main differences among samples. This work demonstrates that it is possible to unfold a multidimensional sensory space with the use of just two well-selected poles, and that the number of poles should be selected considering the main sensory characteristics that discriminate among samples.

Original languageEnglish
JournalFood Quality and Preference
Volume46
Pages (from-to)48–57
Number of pages10
ISSN0950-3293
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2015

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