1.1
This guide covers reasonable practices for designing and implementing sensory tests that validate claims pertaining only to the sensory or perceptual attributes, or both, of a product. This guide was developed for use in the United States and must be adapted to the laws and regulations for advertisement claim substantiation for any other country. A claim is a statement about a product that highlights its advantages, sensory or perceptual attributes, or product changes or differences compared to other products in order to enhance its marketability. Attribute, performance, and hedonic claims, both comparative and non-comparative, are covered. This guide includes broad principles covering selecting and recruiting representative consumer samples, selecting and preparing products, constructing product rating forms, test execution, and statistical handling of data. The objective of this guide is to disseminate good sensory and consumer testing practices. Validation of claims should be made more defendable if the essence of this guide is followed.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Scope
1
Referenced Documents
2
Terminology
3
Basis of Claim Classification
4
Consumer Based Affective Testing
5
Sampling
5.1
Sampling Techniques
5.2
Selection of Products
5.3
Sampling of Products When Both Products Are Currently on
the Market
5.4
Handling of Products When Both Products Are Currently on
the Market
5.5
Sampling of Products Not Yet on the Market
5.6
Sample Preparation/Test Protocol
5.7
Test Design—Consumer Testing
6
Data Collection Strategies
6.6
Interviewing Techniques
6.7
Type of Questions
6.8
Questionnaire Design
6.9
Instruction to Respondents
6.10
Instructions to Interviewers
6.11
General/Overall Questions
6.12
Positioning of the Key Product Rating Questions
6.13
Total Test Context and Presentation Matters
6.14
Specific Attribute Questions
6.15
Classification or Demographic Questions
6.16
Preference Questions
6.17
Test Location
7
Test Execution by Way of Test Agencies—Food and Non-food
Testing
8
Documents to Retain in Sensory Claims Substantiation Research
9
Laboratory Testing Methods
10
Types of Tests
10.2
Advantages and Limitations of the Use of Trained Descriptive
Panels in Claims Support Research
10.3
Test Design—Laboratory Testing
11
Product Procurement
11.6
Experimental Design
11.7
Data Collection
11.8
Data Analysis
11.9
Questionnaire Construction
12
Test Facility
13
Statistical Analysis
14
Paired-Preference Studies
14.1
Superiority Claims
14.2
Equivalence Claims
14.3
Unsurpassed Claims
14.4
Paired Comparison/Difference Studies
14.5
Analysis of Data from Scales
14.6
Keywords
15
Commonly Asked Questions About ASTM and Claim
Substantiation
Appendix X1
1.2
This international standard was developed in accordance with internationally recognized principles on standardization established in the Decision on Principles for the Development of International Standards, Guides and Recommendations issued by the World Trade Organization Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) Committee.