EN ISO 13299:2016
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Sensory analysis - Methodology - General guidance for establishing a sensory profile (ISO 13299:2016)
06-04-2016
European foreword
Foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 General test conditions
5 Descriptive methods: principle and main characteristics
6 Procedure for establishing a sensory profile
Annex A (informative) - Consensus profile
Annex B (informative) - Deviation from reference method
(or relative-to-reference rating)
Annex C (informative) - Free-choice profile
Annex D (informative) - Flash profile
Annex E (informative) - Qualitative sensory profile
Annex F (informative) - Quantitative descriptive profile
Annex G (informative) - Temporal Dominance of
Sensation (TDS)
Annex H (informative) - Univariate analysis when one
attribute is quantified by all the assessors of a panel
Bibliography
ISO 13299:2016 gives guidelines for the overall process for establishing a sensory profile. Sensory profiles can be established for all products or samples which can be evaluated by the senses of sight, odour, taste, touch, or hearing (e.g. food, beverage, tobacco product, cosmetic, textile, paper, packaging, sample of air or water). This International Standard can also be useful in studies of human cognition and behaviour.Some applications of sensory profiling are as follows:- to develop or change a product;- to define a product, production standard, or trading standard in terms of its sensory attributes;- to define a reference "fresh" product for shelf-life testing;- to study and improve shelf-life of a product;- to compare a product with a reference product or with other similar products on the market or under development;- to map a product's perceived attributes for the purpose of relating them to factors such as instrumental, chemical or physical properties, and/or to consumer acceptability;- to characterize by type and intensity the off-odours or off-tastes in a sample (e.g. in pollution studies).
Committee |
CEN/BT
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
PublisherName |
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
|
Status |
Current
|
Standards | Relationship |
NEN EN ISO 13299 : 2016 | Identical |
UNI EN ISO 13299:2016 | Identical |
UNI EN ISO 13299 : 2010 | Identical |
I.S. EN ISO 13299:2016 | Identical |
NF EN ISO 13299 : 2016 | Identical |
DIN EN ISO 13299:2016-09 | Identical |
NS EN ISO 13299 : 2016 | Identical |
UNE-EN ISO 13299:2017 | Identical |
ISO 13299:2016 | Identical |
PN EN ISO 13299 : 2016 | Identical |
SN EN ISO 13299:2016 | Identical |
SS-EN ISO 13299:2016 | Identical |
BS EN ISO 13299:2016 | Identical |
NBN EN ISO 13299 : 2016 | Identical |
S.R. CWA 16814:2014 | NUTRITIONALLY CORRECT LOW-COST FOOD FOR PEOPLE AT RISK OF POVERTY - GENERAL, SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS AND LABELLING OF CHANCE FOOD |
ISO 13300-2:2006 | Sensory analysis General guidance for the staff of a sensory evaluation laboratory Part 2: Recruitment and training of panel leaders |
ISO 5496:2006 | Sensory analysis Methodology Initiation and training of assessors in the detection and recognition of odours |
ISO 13300-1:2006 | Sensory analysis General guidance for the staff of a sensory evaluation laboratory Part 1: Staff responsibilities |
ISO 11035:1994 | Sensory analysis — Identification and selection of descriptors for establishing a sensory profile by a multidimensional approach |
ISO 704:2009 | Terminology work — Principles and methods |
ISO 6658:2017 | Sensory analysis — Methodology — General guidance |
ISO 4121:2003 | Sensory analysis — Guidelines for the use of quantitative response scales |
ISO 8589:2007 | Sensory analysis — General guidance for the design of test rooms |
ISO 11136:2014 | Sensory analysis — Methodology — General guidance for conducting hedonic tests with consumers in a controlled area |
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 |
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