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Summary of principles of sensory science

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Summary of all the lectures, e-modules and videos of the course principles of sensory science

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March 16, 2025
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2024/2025
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Principles of sensory science:

Lecture 1:

Sense of smell:

Functions:

1. Food/flavour
2. Social life
a. Perfumes/hygiene
b. Pheromones
c. Emotions and memory
3. Safety
4. Symptoms of disease




Family of odor receptor genes >1000 genes (GPCR). 350-400 functional genes, detect more.

Receptors recognize only small parts on molecule

Combination of activated receptors is responsible for smell

Multiple odorants can activate multiple receptors. Pattern of activated glomeruli codes for odor
identity.

1. Ipsilateral: smell on leftside > brain activation on left side
2. Not through thalamus nut straight to periform cortex (primary olfactory cortex) > Secondary
cortex (orbital prefrontal cortex) > insula (taste)

, 3. Overlapping activation but unique patterns per odor in the periform cortex.
4. Smell is dependent upon experience

Odor perception and measurement: Plato: pleasant vs unpleasant (subjective)

Measuring olfactory function:

1. Sniffin sticks: identification, discrimination, detection
2. UPSIT: identification
3. Olfactometer

Odor sensitivity: poor intensity ration (large just-noticeable-difference)

Humans are good at discriminating, structurally similar odors more difficult

Factors influencing olfactory ability:

1. Age
2. Gender
3. Smoking
4. Disease/medication
5. Genetics
6. Size (olfactory bul band nasal volume)

Sniffing and smelling: sniff duration more important than strength

Dual role of olfaction: Orthonasal: external smells, retronasal: internal, flavour, weaker

Olfactory dysfunction: 20% with smell loss > ageing, infection, trauma. Impact on independence, QoL

Trigeminal system: chemical irritation in nose and mouth > pepper, mint, wasabi

Trigeminal nerve endings in eyes, nose, mouth:

1. Brainstem (trigeminal nucleus)
2. Primary somatosensory cortex
3. Secondary somatosensory cortex

Odor interactions: odor impacts taste perception and vice versa. Congruency!

Lecture 2:

Sense of taste

Quality and function of taste:

1. Sweet (sucrose): detecting energy content
2. Salt (NaCl): maintaining electrolyte balance
3. Bitter (Quinine): warning
4. Sour (citric acid): guarding pH level
5. Umami (MSG): motivating protein intake

Functions: Gatekeeper of internal system, each taste associated with physical function

Anatomy: More papillae at front of tongue so more sensitive to taste

Tongue > gustatory papillae > taste buds > taste receptor (50 per bud)
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