Evaluation of the Monell forced-choice, paired-comparison tracking procedure for determining sweet taste preferences across the lifespan

Julie A Mennella, Laura D Lukasewycz, James W Griffith, Gary K Beauchamp, Julie A Mennella, Laura D Lukasewycz, James W Griffith, Gary K Beauchamp

Abstract

Lack of methodology to assess taste in children limits its measurement in research studies that include pediatric populations. We used the Monell 2-series, forced-choice tracking method to measure sucrose preferences of a racially/ethnically diverse sample (n = 949) of children, adolescents, and adults. Reliability was assessed by comparing the results of the first series with the second series. Validity was assessed by relating participants' sucrose preferences to their preferences for foods varying in sweetness. The task required, on average, 7 presentations of aqueous sucrose solution pairs. Children and adolescents preferred more concentrated sweetness than adults (P < 0.001). Black children/adolescents preferred a more concentrated sucrose solution than did White children/adolescents even when gender, parental education level, and family income were used as covariates. Data from a single series were sufficient to detect age-related differences but insufficient to detect racial/ethnic differences in sweet preferences. Level of sweetness preferred significantly correlated with the sugar content of favorite cereals (P < 0.001) and beverages (P < 0.02). This method is brief and has evidence of reliability and external validity. Although a single series will yield useful information about age-related differences in taste preferences, the 2-series version should be considered when differences in race/ethnicity are of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Example of a tracking grid used to assess response patterns in a paired-comparison preference task using the “tracking” format for a single subject in the Monell Sweet Preference Study, Philadelphia, PA, 2002–2006. X denotes the 2 stimuli presented in each trial, and the circles indicate which stimulus the individual preferred. Underlining denotes the stimulus presented first (in series 1, the weaker sucrose solution; in series 2, the stronger solution). Response criteria for each series were reached when the subject either chose a given concentration of sucrose paired with both a higher and a lower concentration (top grid) or chose the highest (36% w/v) or lowest (3% w/v) concentration 2 consecutive times (bottom grid). The geometric mean of the 2 preferred concentrations estimates the participant’s most preferred level of sucrose.

Source: PubMed

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