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Comparison of the ability of wine experts and novices to identify odorant signals: a new insight in wine expertise
Author(s) -
Tempere S.,
Hamtat M.L.,
Revel G.,
Sicard G.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
australian journal of grape and wine research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.65
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1755-0238
pISSN - 1322-7130
DOI - 10.1111/ajgw.12192
Subject(s) - wine , identification (biology) , wine tasting , perception , olfaction , task (project management) , psychology , cognition , cognitive psychology , computer science , neuroscience , food science , biology , botany , management , economics
Background and Aims The ability to identify odours is important in wine tasting. Contradictory results have emerged from studies comparing the olfactory identification ability of experts and novices. The aim of this study is to extend the characterisation of olfactory capacity of wine professionals and to discuss the effect of practice and training on odour identification. Methods and Results We used an original method to explore odour identification as a function of a semantic and perceptual task: visual images of odour sources, forced‐choice olfactory identification and response time measurements. The performance of 39 wine experts and 41 novices was compared. The experts were more accurate than novices in olfactory identification; however, their response time was significantly longer. Conclusions As a part of their expertise, wine professionals acquire a better capacity for identifying wine defects or everyday odorants. Significance of the Study Experts apply a more complex cognitive process than novices when confronted with olfactory identification tasks. The mechanisms by which experts acquire their superior skill probably involve memory and olfactory mental representations, but their precise nature remains unclear.

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