Sensory methodologies and the taste of water

Describing the taste of water is a challenge since drinking water is supposed to have almost no taste. In this study, different classical sensory methodologies have been applied in order to assess sensory characteristics of water and have been compared: sensory profiling, Temporal Dominance of Sensations and free sorting task. These methodologies present drawbacks: sensory profile and TDS do not provide an effective discrimination of the taste of water and the free sorting task is efficient but does not enable data aggregation. A new methodology based on comparison with a set of references and named "Polarized Sensory Positioning" (PSP) has been developed enabling to easily define the sensory characteristics of water without presenting too many samples. Finally, this method provides a new type of sensory data requesting dedicated data analysis.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Source 8. Pangborn Sensory Science Symposium
Author Teillet, Eric, E., Schlich, Pascal, Urbano, Christine, C., Cordelle, Sylvie, Guichard, Elisabeth
Maintainer CCSD
Last Updated May 7, 2026, 04:28 (UTC)
Created May 7, 2026, 04:28 (UTC)
Identifier hal-00939537
Language en
contributor Centre des Sciences du Goût (CSG) ; Etablissement National d'Enseignement Supérieur Agronomique de Dijon (ENESAD)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université de Bourgogne (UB)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
coverage Florence, Italy
creator Teillet, Eric, E.
date 2009-07-26T00:00:00
harvest_object_id 197b8fac-6082-4a05-a7ed-a6cbf4929c93
harvest_source_id 3374d638-d20b-4672-ba96-a23232d55657
harvest_source_title test moissonnage SELUNE
metadata_modified 2025-03-31T00:00:00
set_spec type:COMM