Taking individual scaling differences into account by analyzing profile data with the Mixed Assessor Model

Per Bruun Brockhoff, Pascal Schlich, Ib Skovgaard

Research output: Journal Article or Conference Article in JournalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Scale range differences between individual assessors will often constitute a non-trivial part of the assessor-by-product interaction in sensory profile data (Brockhoff, 2003, 1998; Brockhoff and Skovgaard, 1994). We suggest a new mixed model ANOVA analysis approach, the Mixed Assessor Model (MAM) that properly takes this into account by a simple inclusion of the product averages as a covariate in the modeling and allowing the covariate regression coefficients to depend on the assessor. This gives a more powerful analysis by removing the scaling difference from the error term and proper confidence limits are deduced that include scaling difference in the error term to the proper extent. A meta study of 8619 sensory attributes from 369 sensory profile data sets from SensoBase (www.sensobase.fr) is conducted. In 45.3% of all attributes scaling heterogeneity is present (P-value <0.05). For the 33.9% of the attributes having a product difference P-value in an intermediate range by the traditional approach, the new approach resulted in a clearly more significant result for 42.3% of these cases. Overall, the new approach claimed significant product difference (P-value <0.05) for 66.1% of the attributes compared to the 60.3% of traditional approach. Still, the new, and non-symmetrical, confidence limits are more often wider than narrower compared to the classical ones: in 72.6% of all cases.
Original languageEnglish
JournalFood Quality and Preference
Volume39
Pages (from-to)156-166
ISSN0950-3293
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Sensory profile data
  • Analysis of variance
  • Mixed model
  • Assessor differences
  • Scaling differences
  • Disagreement

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