PROJECTIVE MAPPING AND DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS OF MILK
AND DARK CHOCOLATES
J. KENNEDY
1,3,
* and H. HEYMANN
2
1
Food Science Graduate Group
University of California
Davis, CA 95616
2
Department of Viticulture and Enology
University of California
Davis, CA
Accepted for Publication May 30, 2008
ABSTRACT
Recently there has been renewed interest in the use of projective mapping
to evaluate overall product similarity. Previous studies show a high degree of
similarity between product maps from projective mapping and descriptive
analysis techniques; however, trained panels had been used in these studies. In
this study, three groups of untrained panelists performed projective mapping
on a set of chocolates and then were trained and performed descriptive
analysis. Principal component analysis and multifactor analysis were used to
generate product maps of the descriptive analysis and projective mapping
data, respectively. All six maps were visually similar, and RV-coefficients
between the six data sets were greater than 0.8. The results indicate that the
use of untrained judges for the projective mapping provided equivalent
product spaces as obtained by descriptive analysis for this set of products.
Furthermore, the similarity among panels indicates that overall the panelists
perceived the chocolates in a similar manner.
PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS
The current study indicates that projective mapping can provide equivalent
product maps to those obtained by descriptive analysis. On its own, projective
mapping presents an efficient method to obtain overall product differences from
consumers or trained judges. In combination with a descriptive technique,
* Present address: Symrise Inc., Teterboro, NJ 07608.
3
Corresponding author: TEL: +201-462-5736; FAX: +201-288-2292; EMAIL: jes.kennedy@
gmail.com
DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-459X.2008.00204.x
Journal of Sensory Studies 24 (2009) 220–233.
© 2009, The Author(s)
Journal compilation © 2009, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
220