Cognitive Keys in Psychophysical Estimation of Chemosensory Perception in University Students

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2021-12Departamento/s
Didáctica de la Educación Física, Plástica y MusicalFuente
Foods, Vol. 10, Núm. 12Resumen
Psychophysical methods allow us to measure the relationship between stimuli and sensory
perception. Of these, Detection Threshold (DT) allows us to know the minimum concentration to
produce taste identification. Given this, we wonder whether, for example, wine tasting experts are
more capable of perceiving their sensory properties than other people, or whether they can distinguish
them because they are better able to “describe” them. To verify this, this study analyses the influence
of having prior knowledge of the name astringency and, failing that, to detect it and distinguish
it between the four basic tastes. One-hundred-and-sixty-two university students with an average
age of 19.43 (SD = 2.55) years were assigned to three experimental conditions: an experimental
group (G.2) without previous knowledge of the name astringency and with alimentary satiety, and
two control groups, both with previous knowledge of the name, these being G.1, with satiety, and
G.3, with hunger. DT was collected for the four basic tastes and astringencies. Results showed
significant differences in the identification of astringency, being the least identified experimental
group with respect to the control groups. It is striking that G.2, without prior knowledge of the name,
identified astringency as a bitter taste in most cases. This supports our hypothesis of the importance
of attending to linguistic cognitive processes when psychophysically estimating taste in humans.
Materias
taste perception; psychophysical measures; absolute threshold; astringencyColecciones
- Artículos Científicos [11595]
- Articulos Científicos Did. E. Fis. [443]






