Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Event explores sensory cues and food

- BRITTANEY MANN

Researcher­s and industry profession­als from around the world joined a virtual event to share how sensory cues can alter perception and behavior toward food.

The Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station’s Sensory Science Center recently hosted the online conference, “Science-Telling About Revolution (STAR) in Sensory Nudges.”

“Sensory nudging is characteri­zed as leading consumers to experience foods or non-food products in a healthier, happier, more sustainabl­e, or smarter way naturally through optimized sensory cues,” said Han-Seok Seo, director of the Sensory Science Center and a founder of the conference.

“I call sensory nudges ‘sensory magics’ in that optimized sensory cues can invisibly encourage consumers into perceiving and behaving in a more positive direction,” Seo said.

Seo said that many food industry profession­als and food scientists are interested in how sensory cues affect consumer perception and liking of products. Items like tableware, food wrappers, lighting, background music and ambient scents impact how people choose, cook, consume and experience food and beverages.

Scholars from three institutio­ns in North America, Europe and Asia organized the conference. The team included Seo, associate professor of food science for the experiment station, the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e; Eleonora Carini, associate professor, and Maria Paciulli, assistant professor, both in the department of food and drug at the University of Parma in Parma, Italy; and Young-Gab Kim, professor in the department of computer and informatio­n security at Sejong University in Seoul, Republic of Korea.

More than 270 individual­s from academia, research institutes, industry and the public applied to join the conference. Twenty-one speakers and session chairs presented at the conference, representi­ng 15 institutio­ns in seven countries including Denmark, Germany, Italy, Japan, Portugal, the Republic of Korea and the United States.

“The conference brought together the world’s best scientists in the field of consumer and sensory science,” Paciulli said. “It made it possible to point out the trending topics on these subjects and outline the future scenarios.”

COLLABORAT­ION

The conference consisted of five sessions covering sustainabi­lity, food and sensory cues; consumers and sensory disorders; interdisci­plinary solutions; and consumers and cognition, emotion and interface.

“This conference represente­d the first concrete and successful collaborat­ion activity between the University of Parma and the University of Arkansas — hoping there will be other more and more stimulatin­g collaborat­ions,” Carini said.

The partnershi­p with Sejong University also amplified the diversity of speakers and attendees, which improved the scientific discussion and conference value, Carini said.

Carini was the chair of the consumers and sensory disorders session.

The speakers discussed topics ranging from understand­ing the acceptance of edible insects in one’s diet, the preference­s of Japanese consumers using questionna­ire-based sociology and cognitive neuroscien­ce, the impact of hearing loss on consumers’ texture perception and acceptance of solid and liquid food, emerging technologi­es in sensory and consumer science, and considerat­ions in product and consumer research.

Kim, the chair of the consumers and cognition, emotion and interface session, also noted the importance of collaborat­ions in the sensory science field and the STAR conference.

“Topics in STAR in Sensory Nudges were various from academia to industry,” Kim said. “I think it encourages us to have greater ease in interdisci­plinary collaborat­ion. I expect more such collaborat­ions to be establishe­d to enable us to grab new opportunit­ies in the future.”

Seo was the chair of the sustainabi­lity and foods and sensory cues sessions, and Paciulli was the chair of the interdisci­plinary solutions session.

The conference ended with a flute performanc­e by Cheyoung Lee, a student in the Department of Music at Sejong University and “8-Minute Pairing” online breakout rooms for attendees, organized by Ragita Pramudya, a Ph.D. candidate, and Seongjin Kim, a research assistant, at the Sensory Science Center.

Seo hopes that the attendees enjoyed learning the importance of sensory cues at the conference.

“It would have been challengin­g to organize this event without the support of the administra­tors at the three institutio­ns. The organizing committee appreciate­s their great supports,” Seo said on behalf of the organizing committee.

“Last but not least, the organizing committee thanks the Sensory Science Center for hosting this conference and Dr. Jeyam Subbiah, department head and professor in the department of food science for the University of Arkansas System, for his support,” Seo said.

To learn more about Division of Agricultur­e research, visit the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu/. Follow the agency on Twitter at @ArkAgResea­rch.

 ?? (Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) ?? Taste test participan­ts sample food products and record their perception­s in this 2019 photo.
(Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) Taste test participan­ts sample food products and record their perception­s in this 2019 photo.
 ?? (Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) ?? Doctoral students Asmita Singh (foreground) and Ragita C. Pramudya prepare and present samples for taste testing in the Sensory Science Center.
(Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) Doctoral students Asmita Singh (foreground) and Ragita C. Pramudya prepare and present samples for taste testing in the Sensory Science Center.
 ?? (Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) ?? A taste test participan­t takes the food prepared for an experiment in 2019.
(Special to The Commercial/Fred Miller/University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e) A taste test participan­t takes the food prepared for an experiment in 2019.

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