The Sensory Experience

Sensory Analysis for Quality Control

This module forms part of the Sensory Analysis for Quality Control programme and can be taken individually or as part of the full course.

Why flavour is multi-sensory, and why that matters in quality control

Flavour is not just taste.

It is the integration of visual appearance, aroma perception, taste receptor activation, tactile response and even sound.

In quality control environments, each of these sensory inputs can signal oxidation, contamination, process deviation, ingredient imbalance or carbonation inconsistency.

This module builds the scientific foundation required to interpret those signals accurately.

What you will understand by the end of this module

Module content

1 Section #1
2 Section #2
3 Section #3
4 Section #4
5 Section #5
6 Section #6
7 Section #7
8 Section #8
Section #1

Everyday Sensory Experiences

We begin by exploring how sensory perception shapes everyday decision-making.

Through practical examples, this section demonstrates how sight, smell, taste, touch and sound continuously influence expectations and interpretation — often before conscious evaluation occurs.

This establishes the foundation for understanding why sensory assessment must be structured rather than instinctive.

Section #2

Our Human Senses

An introduction to the biological systems that underpin sensory perception.

This section explains how olfactory receptors, taste buds, tactile nerve endings and auditory signals function at a physiological level — and how individual variation (including anosmia and genetic sensitivity differences) affects interpretation.

Understanding the science behind perception improves consistency in panel assessment.

Section #3

Visual Expectations

Visual cues are the first quality checkpoint.

This section explores how colour, clarity, packaging and presentation influence flavour expectation and purchasing behaviour.

You will examine how haze, oxidation, contamination and process variation can manifest visually — and how to interpret these signals within a quality control framework.

Section #4

Aroma

Aroma is central to flavour construction.

This section examines orthonasal and retronasal perception, molecular volatility, temperature influence and receptor interaction.

You will understand how aroma contributes to sweetness perception, freshness signals and fault detection in food and beverage production.

Section #5

Taste

An exploration of the five primary tastes, and how perception differs between individuals.

This section links bitterness, sourness, sweetness and salt perception to ingredient balance, process control and potential contamination issues.

The focus is on applying taste awareness to structured quality evaluation.

Section #6

Touch

Mouthfeel evolves over time during tasting.

This section covers carbonation perception, viscosity, alcohol warmth, astringency and tactile timeline development.

You will learn how tactile signals can indicate process variation or ingredient imbalance.

Section #7

Sound

Sound contributes to perceived freshness and quality.

From carbonation effervescence to packaging interaction, auditory cues influence sensory expectation and product perception.

This section explores how these subtle inputs integrate into overall flavour judgement.

Section #8

Interaction of the Senses

Flavour is constructed in the brain, not the tongue.

This final section examines cross-modal sensory interaction — how colour alters perceived sweetness, how aroma influences acidity perception, and how expectations shape interpretation.

Understanding sensory integration improves objectivity in quality control environments.

Who this module is designed for

This module is particularly relevant for professionals responsible for product quality and sensory evaluation.

This module
£125.00
8 lessons · 90-day access · Module certificate
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Full programme
£575.00
All 8 modules · 180-day access · Full programme certificate
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