Publication | Closed Access
CHARACTERISATION OF PATTERNS OF CHEWING BEHAVIOUR IN HUMAN SUBJECTS AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON TEXTURE PERCEPTION
82
Citations
18
References
1994
Year
NutritionChewing PatternsSensory Science (Early Childhood Education)Meat QualitySensory ScienceSocial SciencesFood ChoiceIdentifiable SubgroupsSensometricsAbstract ElectromyographySensationPerception SystemHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceHuman Ingestive BehaviorFood QualityExperimental PsychologyAnimal BehaviourSensory Science (Food Sensory Science)Food TextureAnimal BehaviorMeat Science
ABSTRACT Electromyography was used as a noninvasive and unobtrusive technique to characterise chewing patterns for a range of foods. Differences between subjects for a variety of aspects of chewing sequence are recorded for a range of foods (carrot, apple, roast pork, salami, biscuit and toast). Identifiable subgroups of subjects differing in chewing behaviour existed within the random sample of 52 dentate subjects. The five subgroups accounted for 52%, 21%, 11%, 10% and 6% of the sample population. Major discriminating factors between the behavioural groups lie in their chewing time and the muscle work rate during chewing. Sensory ratings for firmness and rubberiness of model foods differed significantly between the subjects exhibiting different chewing behaviours. Chewing behaviour may influence consumers’ perceptions about the texture of a food.
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