N. Togari et al., RELATING SENSORY PROPERTIES OF TEA AROMA TO GAS-CHROMATOGRAPHIC DATA BY CHEMOMETRIC CALIBRATION METHODS, Food research international, 28(5), 1995, pp. 485-493
Seven sensory properties in tea aromas such as fresh floral, sweet flo
ral, citrus, sweet fruity, fresh green, resinous and roasted were stat
istically correlated to the GC profiles of volatile flavour components
by multivariate calibration methods. Stepwise multiple linear regress
ion analysis (MLR), principal component regression (PCR) and partial l
east squares (PLS) regression analyses were comparatively applied to t
he sensory scores and the 77 GC peaks. The logarithmic transformation
of GC data considerably improved the coefficients of determination (R(
2)) in, every calibration method. MLR, PCR and PLS succeeded in calcul
ating highly predictable regression models for most aroma properties e
xcept for resinous and roasted. Among 77 volatile components, Linalool
and jasmine lactone, 2-phenylethanol and jasmine lactone, and 2-pheny
lethanol highly contributed for the prediction of fresh floral, sweet
floral and sweet fruity, respectively. Linalool oxide (II) heavily wei
ghted on citrus but the sign for linalool oxide (I) became negative du
e to multicollinearity existing between the two isomers. The R(2)s for
roasted and resinous were comparatively low in the three methods. How
ever, the positive contribution of two pyrrole derivatives for roasted
agreed well with the practical sense in flavour chemistry.