Marrying oral tribology to sensory perception: a systematic review
- PMID: 31903320
- PMCID: PMC6936954
- DOI: 10.1016/j.cofs.2019.05.007
Marrying oral tribology to sensory perception: a systematic review
Abstract
Oral tribology is rapidly entering into the food scientists' toolbox because of its promises to predict surface-related mouthfeel perception. In this systematic review, we discuss how oral tribology relates to specific sensory attributes in model and real foods focussing on recent literature from 2016 onwards. Electronic searches were conducted in four databases, yielding 4857 articles which were narrowed down to a set of 16 articles using pre-specified criteria. New empirical correlations have emerged between friction coefficients in the mixed lubrication regime and fat-related perception (e.g. smoothness) as well as non-fat-related perception (e.g. pastiness, astringency, stickiness). To develop mechanistically supported generalized relationships, we recommend coupling tribological surfaces and testing conditions that are harmonized across laboratories with temporal sensory testing and multivariate statistical analysis.
© 2019 The Authors.
Figures




References
-
- Krop E.M., Hetherington M.M., Holmes M., Miquel S., Sarkar A. On relating rheology and oral tribology to sensory properties in hydrogels. Food Hydrocolloids. 2019;88:101–113.
-
This is the first study that has established correlation of sensory attributes with oral tribology in hydrogels.
-
- Upadhyay R., Chen J. Smoothness as a tactile percept: correlating ‘oral’ tribology with sensory measurements. Food Hydrocolloids. 2019;87:38–47.
-
Systematic study showing correlations between smoothness and lubrication in emulsions.
-
- Liu K., Tian Y., Stieger M., van der Linden E., van de Velde F. Evidence for ball-bearing mechanism of microparticulated whey protein as fat replacer in liquid and semi-solid multi-component model foods. Food Hydrocolloids. 2016;52:403–414.
-
- Sarkar A., Kanti F., Gulotta A., Murray B.S., Zhang S. Aqueous lubrication, structure and rheological properties of whey protein microgel particles. Langmuir. 2017;33:14699–14708. - PubMed
Publication types
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources