The New Zealand Institute for Plant & Food Research Ltd, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand.
The Understanding & Insight Group LLC, Jetersville 23083, Virginia.
J Texture Stud. 2018 Jun;49(3):262-273. doi: 10.1111/jtxs.12328. Epub 2018 Mar 12.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the hypotheses that when presented with foods that could be chewed in different ways, (1) are participants jaw movements and chewing sequence measures correlated with Mouth Behavior (MB) group, as measured by the JBMB typing tool? (2) can MB group membership can be predicted from jaw movement and chewing sequence measures? One hundred subjects (69 female and 31 male, mean age 27 ± 7.7 years) were given four different foods (Mentos, Walkers, Cheetos Puffs, Twix) and video recordings of their jaw movements made. Twenty-nine parameters were calculated on each chewing sequence with 27 also calculated for the first half and second half of chewing sequence. Subjects were assigned to a MB group using the JBMB typing tool which gives four MB groups ("Chewers," "Crunchers," "Smooshers," and "Suckers"). The differences between individual chewing parameters and MB group were assessed with analysis of variance which showed only small differences in average chewing parameters between the MB groups. By using discriminant analysis, it was possible to partially discriminate between MB groups based on changes in their chewing parameters between foods with different material properties and stages of the chewing. A 19-variable model correctly predicted 68% of the subjects' membership of a MB group. This partially confirms our first hypothesis that when presented with foods that could be chewed in different ways participants will use a chewing sequence and jaw movements that correlate with their MB as measured by the JBMB typing tool.
The way consumers chew their food has an impact on their texture perception of that food. While there is a wide range of chewing behaviors between consumers, they can be grouped into broad categories to better target both product design and product testing by sensory panel. In this study, consumers who were grouped on their texture preference (MB group) had jaw movements, when chewing a range of foods, which partially reflected group membership. Therefore, while MB group membership could not be predicted from jaw movement measurements, there were similarities in jaw movements within the members of the groups. A better understanding of how jaw movement during chewing relates to consumer sensory perception would aid in new solid product design with controlled textural attributes.
当面对可采用不同方式咀嚼的食物时,参与者的下颌运动和咀嚼序列测量结果是否与通过 JBMB 分型工具测量的口腔行为 (MB) 组相关?
是否可以根据下颌运动和咀嚼序列测量结果预测 MB 组的成员身份?
100 名受试者(69 名女性,31 名男性,平均年龄 27 ± 7.7 岁)接受了四种不同食物(Mentos、Walkers、Cheetos Puffs、Twix)的测试,并对其下颌运动进行了视频记录。对每个咀嚼序列计算了 29 个参数,其中 27 个参数也用于咀嚼序列的前半部分和后半部分。使用 JBMB 分型工具将受试者分配到 MB 组,该工具将 MB 组分为四个组:“咀嚼者”、“磨牙者”、“压碎者”和“吮吸者”。通过方差分析评估个体咀嚼参数与 MB 组之间的差异,结果显示 MB 组之间的平均咀嚼参数仅存在微小差异。通过判别分析,基于咀嚼参数在不同质地食物和咀嚼阶段的变化,可以对 MB 组进行部分区分。一个 19 变量的模型可以正确预测 68%的受试者的 MB 组成员身份。这部分证实了我们的第一个假设,即当面对可采用不同方式咀嚼的食物时,参与者将使用与通过 JBMB 分型工具测量的 MB 相关的咀嚼序列和下颌运动。
消费者咀嚼食物的方式会影响他们对食物质地的感知。虽然消费者之间的咀嚼行为差异很大,但可以将他们分为广泛的类别,以便更好地针对产品设计和感官小组测试。在这项研究中,根据他们对质地的偏好(MB 组)对消费者进行分组,当他们咀嚼一系列食物时,他们的下颌运动部分反映了他们的组内成员身份。因此,虽然无法根据下颌运动测量结果预测 MB 组的成员身份,但组内成员的下颌运动存在相似之处。更好地了解咀嚼过程中的下颌运动与消费者感官感知之间的关系将有助于具有控制质地属性的新型固体产品设计。