Measurement of Food Perception, Food Preference, and Nutrient Selection
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 561 (1 Nutritio), 226-242
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1989.tb20985.x
Abstract
Perception, preference, and selection are all objectively measurable performances that discriminate between different levels of entities such as the sugar, thickener, or protein in a food. A rating or an intake may not be controlled by the word that the experimenter or the subject uses to describe it: "protein"-oriented food selection, "thickness" preference, or "sweetness" perception is proved only when the named objective influence, isolated from any other influence, accounts for the observed variations in choice response. Difference-measuring designs can be extended from merely two levels of an influence to a continuum over the natural range of levels, thus evoking linear psychophysical (dose-response) performance from which the strength of that influence can be estimated. Usually, at least a few influences are operative at once on a choice. Because the interactions may vary among people, the only valid causal analysis is at the individual level. Examples are given of food taste tolerance in the elderly, integration of sensory and attitudinal influences, and dietary choices misattributed to carbohydrate craving.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Individualized Optimization of the Salt Content of White Bread for AcceptabilityJournal of Food Science, 1988
- Preferred sweetness of a lime drink and preference for sweet over non-sweet foods, related to sex and reported age and body weightAppetite, 1988
- Sweet tooth demonstrated: Individual differences in preference for both sweet foods and foods highly sweetened.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1988
- Toward a unified theory of similarity and recognition.Psychological Review, 1988
- Central dietary “feedback onto nutrient selection”: Not even a scientific hypothesisAppetite, 1987
- Sweetness and Food Selection: Measurement of Sweeteners’ Effects on AcceptancePublished by Springer Nature ,1987
- A multivariate model for discrimination methodsJournal of Mathematical Psychology, 1986
- A Robust, Brief Measure of an Individual’s Most Preferred Level Of Salt in an Ordinary FoodstuffAppetite, 1983
- How should questions about satiation be Asked?Appetite, 1981
- Differential sensitivity in gustation.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1957