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Hard-to-pronounce wine scores big in study

ST. CATHARINES, Ontario, Jan. 31 (UPI) -- If given identical goblets of wine under the same conditions, people tend to say the harder-to-pronounce wine tasted better, Canadian researchers said.

Antonia Mantonakis, an associate professor at Brock University in Ontario, and her research group found when a test group was given an identical wine with two different names, more people pointed to the complicated name as tasting better.

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The professor lined up two similar test groups in Brock's consumer perception and cognition lab. The group was given wine and told it was from the easily-pronounced Titakis Winery. Then it was given wine from Tselepou Winery.

Both names are Greek and begin with a T. Both have three syllables. But Tselepou is harder to pronounce and has more unusual letter combinations. The test consumers rated Tselepou Winery higher on a scale of 1 to 7.

After the experiment, participants were given a short quiz to gauge their knowledge of wine. Those with more wine knowledge in particular showed greater willingness to buy the wine from the hard-to-pronounce winery.

"It's interesting how consumers perceive things," Mantonakis said in a statement. "Something like the sound of a name can elicit a thought, and that thought can influence the perception of how something tastes."

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The findings are scheduled to be presented at the annual Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute Lecture Series Feb 8.

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