The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearchpeer-review

Standard

The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture. / Barbosa Escobar, Francisco; Alves Da Mota, Patricia; Mathiesen, Signe Lund; Velasco, Carlos; Spence, Charles; Wang, Qian Janice.

2022. Poster session presented at EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth, Turku, Finland.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Barbosa Escobar, F, Alves Da Mota, P, Mathiesen, SL, Velasco, C, Spence, C & Wang, QJ 2022, 'The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture', EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth, Turku, Finland, 13/09/2022 - 16/09/2022.

APA

Barbosa Escobar, F., Alves Da Mota, P., Mathiesen, S. L., Velasco, C., Spence, C., & Wang, Q. J. (2022). The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture. Poster session presented at EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth, Turku, Finland.

Vancouver

Barbosa Escobar F, Alves Da Mota P, Mathiesen SL, Velasco C, Spence C, Wang QJ. The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture. 2022. Poster session presented at EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth, Turku, Finland.

Author

Barbosa Escobar, Francisco ; Alves Da Mota, Patricia ; Mathiesen, Signe Lund ; Velasco, Carlos ; Spence, Charles ; Wang, Qian Janice. / The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture. Poster session presented at EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth, Turku, Finland.

Bibtex

@conference{c796d4ca27f144ad851f499b560f5d03,
title = "The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture",
abstract = "The oral-somatosensory mouthfeel of foodstuffs is a critical factor driving liking and acceptability. Previous studies have revealed that the use of audiovisual elements in food packaging can affect consumers{\textquoteright} sensory expectations of food. However, research on the crossmodal influence of visual and auditory cues on mouthfeel expectations is scarce. Here, we investigated the relative and interactive effects of visual and auditory representations of sine and sawtooth waves which, according to previous literature, are associated with smoothness and roughness, respectively, on individuals{\textquoteright} expectations concerning the texture of dark chocolate. We hypothesised that the audiovisual representations of sine (sawtooth) waves would increase (decrease) smoothness and creaminess expectations and decrease (increase) firmness expectations. Moreover, we expected to observe additive effects between the audiovisual cues and to find differences in the effects between people who prefer milk vs. dark chocolate.We conducted a 3 (Visual texture: sine, sawtooth, control) × 3 (Auditory timbre: sine, sawtooth, control) between-participants online experiment (N = 634). Participants were presented with a photograph of a dark chocolate next to its packaging (see Figure 1) and evaluatedexpected texture (i.e., firmness, smoothness, creaminess), taste (i.e., sweetness, bitterness), and liking. Participants also indicated whether they generally preferred milk or dark chocolate.Figure 1. Stimuli used in the study.After controlling for age and gender, ANCOVA results revealed a significant main effect of visual texture on firmness expectations only for participants who preferred milk over dark chocolate (n = 494), where chocolate with sawtooth wave packaging was expected to be firmer than the other two packagings (see Figure 2).",
author = "{Barbosa Escobar}, Francisco and {Alves Da Mota}, Patricia and Mathiesen, {Signe Lund} and Carlos Velasco and Charles Spence and Wang, {Qian Janice}",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
note = "EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth : 10th European Conference on Sensory and Consumer Research ; Conference date: 13-09-2022 Through 16-09-2022",
url = "https://www.eurosense.elsevier.com/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The effect of audio-visual representations of sine and sawtooth waves on expected chocolate texture

AU - Barbosa Escobar, Francisco

AU - Alves Da Mota, Patricia

AU - Mathiesen, Signe Lund

AU - Velasco, Carlos

AU - Spence, Charles

AU - Wang, Qian Janice

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The oral-somatosensory mouthfeel of foodstuffs is a critical factor driving liking and acceptability. Previous studies have revealed that the use of audiovisual elements in food packaging can affect consumers’ sensory expectations of food. However, research on the crossmodal influence of visual and auditory cues on mouthfeel expectations is scarce. Here, we investigated the relative and interactive effects of visual and auditory representations of sine and sawtooth waves which, according to previous literature, are associated with smoothness and roughness, respectively, on individuals’ expectations concerning the texture of dark chocolate. We hypothesised that the audiovisual representations of sine (sawtooth) waves would increase (decrease) smoothness and creaminess expectations and decrease (increase) firmness expectations. Moreover, we expected to observe additive effects between the audiovisual cues and to find differences in the effects between people who prefer milk vs. dark chocolate.We conducted a 3 (Visual texture: sine, sawtooth, control) × 3 (Auditory timbre: sine, sawtooth, control) between-participants online experiment (N = 634). Participants were presented with a photograph of a dark chocolate next to its packaging (see Figure 1) and evaluatedexpected texture (i.e., firmness, smoothness, creaminess), taste (i.e., sweetness, bitterness), and liking. Participants also indicated whether they generally preferred milk or dark chocolate.Figure 1. Stimuli used in the study.After controlling for age and gender, ANCOVA results revealed a significant main effect of visual texture on firmness expectations only for participants who preferred milk over dark chocolate (n = 494), where chocolate with sawtooth wave packaging was expected to be firmer than the other two packagings (see Figure 2).

AB - The oral-somatosensory mouthfeel of foodstuffs is a critical factor driving liking and acceptability. Previous studies have revealed that the use of audiovisual elements in food packaging can affect consumers’ sensory expectations of food. However, research on the crossmodal influence of visual and auditory cues on mouthfeel expectations is scarce. Here, we investigated the relative and interactive effects of visual and auditory representations of sine and sawtooth waves which, according to previous literature, are associated with smoothness and roughness, respectively, on individuals’ expectations concerning the texture of dark chocolate. We hypothesised that the audiovisual representations of sine (sawtooth) waves would increase (decrease) smoothness and creaminess expectations and decrease (increase) firmness expectations. Moreover, we expected to observe additive effects between the audiovisual cues and to find differences in the effects between people who prefer milk vs. dark chocolate.We conducted a 3 (Visual texture: sine, sawtooth, control) × 3 (Auditory timbre: sine, sawtooth, control) between-participants online experiment (N = 634). Participants were presented with a photograph of a dark chocolate next to its packaging (see Figure 1) and evaluatedexpected texture (i.e., firmness, smoothness, creaminess), taste (i.e., sweetness, bitterness), and liking. Participants also indicated whether they generally preferred milk or dark chocolate.Figure 1. Stimuli used in the study.After controlling for age and gender, ANCOVA results revealed a significant main effect of visual texture on firmness expectations only for participants who preferred milk over dark chocolate (n = 494), where chocolate with sawtooth wave packaging was expected to be firmer than the other two packagings (see Figure 2).

M3 - Poster

T2 - EuroSense 2022: A Sense of Earth

Y2 - 13 September 2022 through 16 September 2022

ER -

ID: 344448153