August 29, 2014

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

How does your wine make you feel?

× close

University of Adelaide researchers are investigating the links between wine, where it's consumed and emotion to help the Australian wine industry gain deeper consumer insights into their products.

A trial is being carried out involving 360 wine consumers who have been sampling specific wines in different environments, and rating their emotional response on a specially devised 'wine emotion scale'.

"There has been a lot of work done on sensory analysis of wine so we now have a very good idea of what consumers like about wine," says project leader Dr Sue Bastian, Senior Lecturer in Oenology and Sensory Studies, in the School of Agriculture, Food and Wine.

"But just knowing what flavours consumers like and don't like is not enough. We need to learn from the food and perfume industries and understand how wines affect our emotions - and the role emotions play in influencing what we choose to drink at certain occasions and how emotions affect our purchasing decisions."

Over the past 18 months in preparation for the consumer trial:

The participants then blind tasted four wines in three different settings - a restaurant, at home and in the sensory laboratory. They rated 19 different emotions the wines may have prompted ranging from warm-hearted or nostalgic through to tense or irritated on a scale of 1-9 (not-at-all to extremely).

"There are characters in wines which may generate negative emotion; but we also want to understand what it is about wine which drives positive emotion," says Dr Bastian.

"We are also looking at how the wine setting, for example drinking in a restaurant as opposed to home, impacts the emotions that are stimulated as well as how the consumers like the wines and their perceptions of and the price they are prepared to pay.

"And we're investigating how consumer research lab results compare to those from more natural settings of home and restaurant to see if lab data can successfully predict consumer decisions compared to using more representative places and measures of consumer behaviour.

"Ultimately we want to have a clear understanding of our to wines and help the Australian industry, worth over $2.4 billion domestically, utilise this knowledge in its product development, differentiation and marketing."

Load comments (0)