Saltiness and Acidity: Detection and Recognition Thresholds and Their Interaction Near the Threshold
Keiko Hatae, Fujio Takéutchi, Mariko Sakamoto, Yasushi Ogasawara, Hirofumi Akano
Journal of Food Science
Abstract
Interaction of saltiness and acidity at the threshold level was studied employing 35 to 40 young female panelists. As a 1st step, the detection and recognition thresholds of salt, rice vinegar, and rice black vinegar have been measured for each panelist. To investigate the above interaction, the thresholds have been again measured for each panelist of salt, but this time, vinegar at half the concentration of each panelist's detection threshold was added to the salt solution. Similar measurement has been performed for vinegars with salt at half the concentration of each panelist's detection threshold. The data analysis has been done in 2 ways, namely, (1) by using Student's t-test to detect the significant difference in average between the data with and without the added ingredient and (2) detecting significant deviations from zero in the individual shifts in 2 sensory tests among panelists who participated in the 2 measurements. In doing that, a conversion of the scale was necessary to correct the systematic skewness existing in the original data. As a result, both the detection and recognition thresholds of salt were decreased with the existence of the added vinegar ingredient (P < 0.001). This tendency was more pronounced with rice black vinegar than with rice vinegar. On the contrary, no significant changes in the threshold of both detection and recognition were observed when salt at the half concentration of the detection threshold was added to rice vinegar. The interaction therefore was found to be asymmetric.
Extracted Claims
3 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
vinegar did not significantly change detection and recognition thresholds of salt
“no significant changes in the threshold of both detection and recognition were observed when salt at the half concentration of the detection threshold was added to rice vinegar.”
salt decreased detection and recognition thresholds with vinegar
“both the detection and recognition thresholds of salt were decreased with the existence of the added vinegar ingredient (P < 0.001).”
rice black vinegar decreased detection and recognition thresholds of salt more than rice vinegar
“This tendency was more pronounced with rice black vinegar than with rice vinegar.”