BS ISO 8588:2017
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Sensory analysis. Methodology. \'A\'. \'not A\' test
Hardcopy , PDF
English
31-07-2017
Foreword
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Principle
5 Apparatus
6 Sampling
7 General test conditions
8 Assessors
9 Procedure
10 Expression of results
Annex A (informative) - Examples of the application
of the 'A' - 'not A' test
Annex B (informative) - Extracts from CHI[2] and
standard normal tables
Annex C (informative) - Examples of answer forms
for an 'A' - 'not A' test
Bibliography
Describes a procedure for determining whether a perceptible sensory difference exists between samples of two products.
Committee |
AW/12
|
DevelopmentNote |
Supersedes BS 5929-5(1988). (08/2017)
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
Pages |
22
|
PublisherName |
British Standards Institution
|
Status |
Current
|
Supersedes |
This document specifies a procedure for determining whether a perceptible sensory difference exists between samples of two products. The method applies whether a difference exists in a single sensory attribute or in several. The “A”–“notA” test can be used in sensory analysis in the following ways: as a difference test, particularly for evaluating samples having variations, for example, in appearance (making it difficult to obtain strictly identical repeat samples) or in aftertaste (making direct comparison difficult); as a recognition test, particularly for determining whether an assessor or group of assessors identifies a new stimulus in relation to a known stimulus (for example, recognition of the quality of the sweet taste of a new sweetener); as a perception test, to determine the ability of an assessor to discriminate stimuli. The “A”–“notA” test is not appropriate for assessing if two products are sufficiently similar to be used interchangeably (i.e. for similarity testing) because the “A”–“notA” test inherently involves replicate evaluations of the same products by all assessors. These replicate evaluations violate the basic assumptions for similarity tests to be statistically valid. Examples of its application are given in AnnexB. NOTE Bi and Ennis[1] point out that the estimate of the discriminal distance, d’, between the “A” and “not A” samples is the same regardless of the nature of the replicated evaluations performed in the test but that the estimate of the variance of d’ does depend on how the replicate evaluations were performed. As such, no general discussion of a Thurstonian analysis of the “A” – “not A” method, nor of the power of the test is undertaken in this document. Interested readers are referred to Reference [1] for a detailed discussion of the topic.
Standards | Relationship |
ISO 8588:2017 | Identical |
ISO 8589:2007 | Sensory analysis — General guidance for the design of test rooms |
ISO 5492:2008 | Sensory analysis — Vocabulary |
ISO 8586:2012 | Sensory analysis — General guidelines for the selection, training and monitoring of selected assessors and expert sensory assessors |
ISO 3534-1:2006 | Statistics — Vocabulary and symbols — Part 1: General statistical terms and terms used in probability |
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