Perceptual interactions between characteristic notes smelled above aqueous solutions of odorant mixtures

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Abstract

Twenty-two experienced panelists rated odor intensity of aqueous solutions of citral, octen-1-ol-3, and hexanal. The panel assessed unmixed components and mixtures (9 binary and 4 ternary). In sensory sessions dedicated to mixtures (n = 6), evaluation was focused on one target odor, presented at a fixed concentration. All components had lower odor intensity on mixed presentations. In many cases, information obtained from simpler systems was not extended to complex mixtures. In a mixture, the competition between odorant molecules on qualitative aspects (dominance/suppression) imbalanced components contribution, anticipated from the quantitative distribution. Hexanal appeared to be the potentially weaker odorant in paired combinations, whereas octen-1-ol-3 had a lower relative impact on ternary systems. Suppression of the odor of octen-1-ol-3 and a concomitant increase in the odor of hexanal was common to all ternary mixtures. Reciprocal inhibition of octen-1-ol-3 and citral odors through perceptual interactions was suspected. Mutual suppression is suspected to have eased the perception of hexanal intensity. © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

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Brossard, C., Rousseau, F., & Dumont, J. P. (2007). Perceptual interactions between characteristic notes smelled above aqueous solutions of odorant mixtures. Chemical Senses, 32(4), 319–327. https://doi.org/10.1093/chemse/bjm002

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