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Sensory Factors Influencing Healthy Food Choices

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Title: Sensory Factors Influencing Healthy Food Choices


1
Sensory Factors Influencing Healthy Food
Choices Patrick A. Morrissey, Conor M. Delahunty
Caroline A. Martin Department of Food and
Nutritional Sciences, University College, Cork,
Ireland
2
The concepts of food
3
The food needs of consumers
  • Nutritional well-being is essential at every
    stage of life
  • Nutritional requirements change across the
    lifespan
  • Food preferences and food intake also change.
  • Malnutrition, manifest in under-eating,
    over-eating, or insufficient nutrient intake is
    widespread among almost all age groups, or life
    stages.
  • In addition, increasing need for new functionally
    enhanced foods to complement existing diet

4
Factors influencing food choice and acceptability
  • Genotype, physiology and age
  • Eating habits and past food experience
  • Cultural, social and economic demographics
  • Attitudes and beliefs
  • Personality
  • Health and nutritional status
  • Etc.

5
Role of the senses
  • Function as gatekeepers to our body
  • Evaluate and distinguish the foods that are
    acceptable for consumption from those that should
    be rejected
  • The senses have evolved to aid decision processes
  • Play an important role in food liking and intake
  • Subtle differences in taste and smell influence
    preferences
  • The decision on what is good to eat? is
    individual

6
Preference response to sensory characteristics
Delahunty, 2003
7
The consumers decision
When the entire product has been consumed, the
consumer will pass judgement
  • The seed for repeat purchase will be planted in
    memory
  • The product will be simply forgotten
  • The product will be actively avoided

8
Sensitivity to smell
  • The stimuli for smell are airborne compounds of
    volatile substances
  • Odour stimulating compounds create perceptions
    endowed with distinctive smells
  • The olfactory system responds to odour (sensed
    orthonasally) and aroma (sensed retronasally)
  • The main contribution to the diversity of food
    flavour comes from volatiles released during
    consumption

9
Sensitivity to smell
  • The olfactory system is anatomically complete at
    birth
  • Newborns can smell and can discriminate between
    different odours
  • Infants learn to develop preferences that are in
    keeping with their peers
  • Older adults loose smell ability
  • They have higher absolute odour thresholds, less
    ability to perceive differences between
    suprathreshold odour intensity levels, and
    decreased ability to identify odours

10
Sensitivity to taste
  • The process begins in the oral cavity
  • Receptors stimulated by contact with liquid
    compounds
  • Newborn infants can discriminate between basic
    tastes. They like sweet and dislike sour and
    bitter
  • They are indifferent to salty taste probably
    insensitive
  • Preference for salt emerges at about 4 months

11
Sensitivity to taste
  • Innate taste preferences remain strong
    through-out the lifetime, but may be modified by
    experience
  • In older age, taste sensitivity remains
    relatively intact, although there may be problems
    with quality identification
  • Thresholds for salt and bitter taste may
    increase, whereas sweet and sour thresholds show
    little change
  • Loss in ability to sense saltiness can create
    problems in healthy hypertensive populations

12
Chemical irritation perception
  • Chemesthesis is the term used to describe the
    detection of chemical irritants
  • Involves the 5th cranial nerve, or trigeminal
    nerve of the face
  • Detection takes place primarily in the eyes, nose
    and mouth
  • Primary function of chemesthesis is to protect
    the body from noxious chemical stimuli
  • This high influence sense is exploited
    commercially

13
Chemical irritation perception
  • Trigeminal sensations refer to the fizzy tingle
    from CO2, burn from hot pepper, pungency from
    mustard, bite from raw onions etc.
  • Many common odour and flavour compounds also have
    trigeminal activity many odours can be detected
    by anosmics
  • Trigeminal sensations contribute much to the
    sensory balance and overall appeal of foods and
    beverages
  • Little evidence is available on ability to
    perceive trigeminal stimulation at different ages

14
Texture perception and performance
  • Texture perceived by senses of sight, tough and
    sound
  • Sensations of texture based on sensations
    perceived when food is manipulated in the mouth
    (bitten, chewed, swallowed)
  • Sense organs involved grouped as follows
  • Those in superficial structures of mouth
  • Those around roots of teeth
  • Those in muscles and tendons

15
Texture perception and performance
  • Mouthfeel plays an essential part in the
    perception of textural properties of food
  • Little information is available on changes of
    texture perception in the mouth with ageing
  • Physiological changes in the mouth influence
    abilty to breakdown food without difficulty or
    pain

16
Memory
  • Memory is implicated in many forms and ways
    preferences, aversions, meal patterns, meal
    satisfaction
  • Implicit memory is the basis of unconcious
    expectations
  • Memory may be a bridge to the past and as such
    determine the authenticity of the taste
  • Age related changes in memory can influence
    recall of past experiences with food
  • Age related changes in memory can also influence
    sensory discrimination capacity

17
The food needs of older consumers
  • Nutritional well-being is essential to achieve
    successful ageing and ensure older adults
    independence and quality of life
  • Sub-clinical intakes of energy, calcium, vitamin
    D, vitamin B6, folate and zinc are common
  • Low energy intake is most prevalent, and this
    impairs an individuals ability to meet
    requirements for essential nutrients
  • Older consumers are encouraged to consume a
    nutritionally balanced, nutrient dense diet
    containing a variety of foods in moderation
  • Increasing need for new functionally enhanced
    foods to complement existing diet

18
The food needs of older consumers
  • Elderly consumers have reduced sensitivity to
    odour and mouthfeel
  • Ageing alters saliva flow and composition
  • This affects ability to breakdown food, inhibits
    mixing, retards flavour release and makes
    swallowing difficult
  • Older people loose interest in food and food
    related activities
  • The motivation to seek variety in the diet may be
    reduced
  • Leads to consumption of a monotonous diet,
    reduced energy intake and deficiency in essential
    nutrients

19
Technological challenges
  • The consumer demands many new products with
    functional ingredients
  • The consumer demands products with reduced fat,
    salt and sugar
  • Each change is a move away from traditional
    technologies
  • Requires new technologies to mask off-flavour, to
    re-introduce lost flavour, or to rebuild texture
  • The consumer will seek familiarity in sensory
    properties and will not be satisfied with
    alternatives

20
The contribution of the senses to healthy food
choice and intake
  • How does society, and the food industry,
    currently contribute to incorrect dietary habits
    and dietary guidance strategy through a lack of
    understanding of changing sensory function and
    its significance in regulating optimum dietary
    intake?
  • Seek knowledge of how sensitivity and hedonic
    response change across the lifespan
  • Determine relationships between these factors and
    eating behaviour that can be exploited in
    age-appropriate new product development
  • Restrict tastes that cause indulgence and promote
    tastes that signal nutritive value

21
Healthy Ageing How Changes in Sensory
Physiology, Sensory Psychology and
Socio-Cognitive Factors Influence Food Choice
(QLKI-CT-1999-00010)
  • To generate scientific data on the relationship
    between sensory physiology and food preferences
  • To study degradation of sensory capability in the
    ageing and determine how this affects their food
    preferences and general well-being
  • To understand how older people deal with issues
    related to food and choice
  • To publish the results in a format to be used by
    makers, food industry and consumer organisations
    that support the elderly

22
HealthSense Project Structure 24 Research
Partners, 8 Workpackages
23
Sensory ability and age Taste identification
24
Sensory ability and age
Oral Stereognosis
Masticatory function
25
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26
Texture preferences of older consumers
Difficult textures for older consumers
Easy textures for the older consumers
Liking and eating difficulties are not always
correlated
27
Effect of eating environment
P lt0.001
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Factors influencing food choice across EU states
31
Recommendations for the future
  • It is time to understand better the development
    of food preferences with positive nutrition in
    mind and to exploit sensory properties to
    increase intake of foods with high nutritive
    value that promote long term health and
    well-being
  • Develop dietary strategies that take account of
    the sensory properties of food. Unacceptable
    tastes that do not match individual likes or
    expectations, are an obstacle to compliance with
    a recommended change in diet
  • The hedonics of taste are arguably malleable
    through experience. Hedonic response to the
    tastes of beneficial foods, and those that
    should be avoided, needs to be adjusted
  • Food habits are learned, but are also determined
    by genotype. With an understanding of this
    relationship, food habits can be changed to
    enable nutritional well-being and improved health


32
The EU 6th Framework Programme
  • Food acceptability, leading to intake, and
    desired nutritional benefit is determined by an
    integrated response to signals from biological,
    physiological, sociological, cultural and
    economic factors.
  • These factors determine initial eating habits
    from birth, and continued eating habits
    through-out life.
  • There is a chain of influence from GENE TO INTAKE
  • There is very important need to integrate
    research in each of the areas identified as
    factors determining intake, so that the
    development of eating habits, and ability to
    change eating habits, can be understood.
  • The EU 6th framework, via the integrated project
    instruments, provides the platform for this
    important research integration.
  • However, the current EU 6th Framework work
    programme has ommitted this entire area of
    research.
  • It is most important that a future call for
    integrated projects, will call for a project
    specifically in the area of Determinants of food
    intake


33
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