Effect of consumers’ origin on perceived sensory quality, liking and liking drivers: A cross-cultural study on European cheeses
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Date
2020Author
Ojeda Atxiaga, Mónica
Valentin, Dominique
Dacremont, Catherine
Zannoni, Mario
Tupasela, Tuomo
Lilleberg, Leena
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Food Quality and Preference 87: (2021) // Article ID 104047
Abstract
We aim at studying consumers’ Perceived Sensory Quality (PSQ) concept. We manipulated a priori both familiarity
(contrast local vs. foreign cheeses) and quality level (contrast PDO or traditional cheeses vs. their non-
PDO and/or industrial counterpart). The study was run in four European countries. Thus, eight cheeses (one PDO
or traditional cheese and one non-PDO cheese from each of the four European countries) were assessed by a total
of 438 consumers (from 100 to 120 consumers from each region) in terms of PSQ and liking. The cheeses were
also described by a trained panel.
PSQ depended on both consumers’ and cheeses’ origin. The main finding is that in the three countries with
PDO culture, consumers identified domestic PDO cheese as having a significantly higher PSQ than its non-PDO
counterpart, whereas they were not able to differentiate PDO and non-PDO cheeses from other countries.
Overall, sensory drivers of PSQ were similar across consumers of different origin but, the relationship between
PSQ and liking is higher for non-local cheeses than for local cheeses. Overall, the results support the idea that
PSQ is related to liking but is also modulated by product familiarity.