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Cognitive Psychology: Taste and Smell lecture notes

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Full lecture notes from Cognitive Psychology C82NAB module - Taste and Smell.

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TASTE AND SMELL
 Taste (gustation) and smell (olfaction) are often referred to as the chemical senses.
 They are mediated in the first instance by receptors that are stimulated by chemical substances
– “chemoreceptors”
 Taste: chemicals dissolve in our mouth (must be water soluble) and stimulate the taste buds in
the oral cavity (tongue, soft palate, cheek) etc.
 Smell: Volatile (gaseous) chemicals are inhaled into the nasal passage or mouth where olfractory
receptors line the membranes.
 Taste and Smell are closely linked in that they are both usually involved in activities like food
seeking and sampling.
- Smell conveys important non-nutritive information – presence of prey, predators and mates
- Taste aids in the regulation of nutrients and enables the organism to test substances prior to
ingestion.


TASTE

 For humans, there are at least 4 basic taste qualities and sensations (Henning,1916)
- Sweet
- Sour
- Salty
- Bitter
 The relationship between a substance taste and chemical composition is not straightforward,
but in general:
- Sweet taste: carbohydrates and amino acids (glucose)
- Sour taste: acidic substances (vinegar)
- Salty taste: organic salts
- Bitter taste: alkaloids often poisonous (quinine – tonic water, strychnine- rat poison)
 As nutritious substances tend to taste sweet and poisonous ones bitter – evolutionary
 But specifying the adequate stimulus for evoking a primary taste sensation is very difficult in
practise – taste quality depends on factors such as substance concentration .e.g. lithium
chloride changes from sweet to sour as concentration increases.
 Average human has 10,000 taste buds.
- Found in 3 types of little bumps (papillae) on human tongue
- Each papillae has between several hundred to one taste bud
- Life span of a taste bud is 10 days
- Chemicals dissolved in saliva are in direct contact with microvilli (finger like structures) of
receptor cells.
- Follate Circumvallate (back of tongue)
- Fungiform (middle)
- Filoform (tip, no taste buds- just abrades food).
 Taste stimuli interact with receptor sites and ion channels on the microvilli

,  There are several different types of transduction mechanisms that convert chemical stimulation
into neural responses
 3 sets of afferent nerve fibres carry taste information derived from the taste buds in the tongue
and oral cavity
- Chorda tympani: front of the tongue
- Glossopharyngeal: back region of the tongue
- Vagus: throat, pharynx and larynx
 Afferent fibres travel to nuclei in the brainstem and then via the thalamus to the primary taste
area in the parietal lobe of the cortex (near the somatosensory cortex)
 Some fibres also project to the orbito-frontal cortex. Involved in the behavioural
significance/reward value of food and perhaps the degree of pleasantness of stimuli.
 Most receptor cells respond to some extent to all 4 basic kinds of taste, although with different
sensitivity
 Many taste responsive cells in the thalamus also respond to all tastes
 The Cross fibre theory (Plaffman, Erickson) says how the brain differentiates between different
substances
- Supported by electrophysical recordings from individual taste sensitive cells in hamster, rat
and primate
- The pattern of firing across different neurons to a particular stimulus is thus different
- Consequently information about taste quality/identity can be coded in the pattern of
activity within an ensemble or group of neurons.

Limits

 Detection thresholds for taste depend on:
- Substance tested, temperature, mouth region tested, viscosity and presence of other
substances.
- Taste sensitivity greatest (threshold lowest) between 22 degrees – 32 degrees regardless of
taste quality
- Not all papillae are equally responsive and sensitivity to specific substances varies over the
tongues surface
- Front: sweet and bitter, back sides: sour and front sides: salt
- In addition soft palate maximally sensitive to bitter substances
 Electrophysiological recordings from taste fibres innervating the front of the tongue (chorda
tympani) were made during surgery (Borg et al, 1967)
- Patient made magnitude estimate of taste substances
- Very close correspondence between estimates and recordings
- Responses of taste nerve and subject both increased with concentration
- Neural code for taste intensity appears to be the overall activity evoked by a stimulus.
- Subjects can discriminate intensity differences of 15-25% for sucrose.

Nontasters, tasters and supertasters

 Individuals can differ dramatically in the ability to taste certain substances
 Two such substances are the intensely bitter taster compounds phenylthiocarbamide (PTC) and
6-n-propylthiouracil (PROP)
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