Business Network Bureau

Business Network Bureau

Band 6 /7 Dietitian ITU
Cambridgeshire - 1 month Candidate must have ITU experience. Join the agency that sets the standards. Excellent rates, plus benefits package. Sonographers Medical is an approved More...
Member Login
User Name:
Password:
Register
NH Publishing Ltd
Suite 1 Freshfield Hall, The Square, Lewes Rd,
Forest Row, East Sussex
RH18 5ES
United Kingdom
Tel +44 (0) 845 450 2125
Fax +44 (0) 870 762 3713
Email Us

Flavour Perception

Back

Flavour Perception

Edited by: Andrew Taylor (Professor of Flavour Technology, Division of Food Sciences, University of Nottingham, UK) and Deborah Roberts

Unlike other human senses, the exact mechanisms that lead to our perception of flavor have not yet been elucidated. It is recognised that the process involves a wide range of stimuli, which are thought likely to interact in a complex way, but, since the chemical compounds and physical structures that activate the flavor sensors change as the food is eaten, measurements of the changes in stimuli with time are essential to an understanding of the relationship between stimuli and perception.

It is clear that we need to consider the whole process - the release of flavor chemicals in the mouth, the transport processes to the receptors, the specificity and characteristics of the receptors, the transduction mechanisms and the subsequent processing of signals locally and at higher centres in the brain.

Contents:

1. Measuring proximal stimuli involved in flavour perception
Andrew J. Taylor and Joanne Hort, Division of Food Sciences, University of Nottingham, U
2. The role of oral processing in flavour perception
Jon F. Prinz and Rene De Wijk, Wageningen Centre for Food Sciences, Wageningen, The Netherlands
3. The cellular basis of flavour perception: taste and aroma
Nancy E. Rawson and Xia Li, Monell Chemical Senses, Philadelphia, USA
4. Structural recognition between odorants, olfactory-binding proteins and olfactory receptors, first events in odour coding
J.C. Pernollet and Loïc Briand, INRA, Jouy En Josas, France
5. Oral chemesthesis: an integral component of flavour
Barry G. Green, School of Medicine, Yale University, Connecticut, US
6. Flavour perception and the learning of food preferences
Anthony A. Blake, Firmenich SA, Geneva, Switzerland
7. Functional magnetic resonance imaging of human olfaction
M. Wiesmann, Abteilung für Neuroradiologie, Universitätsklinikum München - Großhadern, München, Germany, Birgit Kettenmann, Department of Radiology, Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, Virginia, USA and Gerd G. Kobal, Sensory Research, WSA Philip Morris USA, Richmond, Virginia, USA
8. Flavor interactions at the sensory level
Russell R. Keast, Pamela H. Dalton and Paul A.S. Breslin, Monell Chemical Senses Centre, Philadelphia, USA
9. Psychological processes in flavour perception
John Prescott, School of Psychology, James Cook University, Cairns, Australia
References
Index

Product Code Description Attributes Price 
BP023 Providing a state-of-the-art review of our current understanding of the key stages of flavor perception for those working in the flavor field, whether in the academic or industrial sector. ISBN: 9781405116275
Format: Hardback
Details: 234 x 156 mm , 9.187 x 6.125 in, 304 pages
£110.00

In categories:

bookstore