Lorena Garitta, Klaus Langohr, Eliana Elizagoyen, Fernanda Gugole Ottaviano, Guadalupe Gómez, Guillermo Hough
Index: 10.1016/j.foodqual.2018.03.014
Full Text: HTML
The main objective of this study was to introduce a survival model to contemplate two simultaneous accelerating factors affecting a food product’s shelf life: temperature and illumination. A second objective was to consider the case where the same consumer tests different experimental conditions and thus his/her data are not independent. Sample data comprised 108 consumers who evaluated a lemon-flavored juice stored at 24°C, 37°C and 45°C; under conditions of no-illumination and with illumination; with seven different storage times for each of the six experimental conditions. Aiming to estimate the storage time at which a consumer rejects a sample a model including an Arrhenius term for the temperature, a binomial response for illumination (with and without) and the interaction of both was developed. The model also considered that the same consumer tested different experimental conditions.
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