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TASTE

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Omnivores must be able to taste and smell a variety of ... Saltiness: NaCl, KCl, LiCl. Sourness: organic, inorganic acids. Bitterness: alkali and alkaloids ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TASTE


1
TASTE
2
IMPORTANCE OF TASTING AND SMELLING
  • Protection
  • Taste vomiting is not always an option
  • Odor advanced warning (e.g., fire)
  • Diet
  • Omnivores must be able to taste and smell a
    variety of potential foods.
  • Pleasure
  • Motivation to eat.

3
TASTE
  • Taste occurs at the...
  • tongue
  • lips (in babies)
  • soft palate
  • epiglottis
  • The primary unit of taste is the tastebud

4
TASTEBUDS
  • Modified epithelial cells--approx. 10,000
  • Lifespan of 10 days
  • Found in papillae

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DO TASTE PRIMARIES EXIST?
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THE TASTE PRIMARIES
  • Saltiness NaCl, KCl, LiCl
  • Sourness organic, inorganic acids
  • Bitterness alkali and alkaloids
  • Sweetness sugars, some amino acids proteins
  • Umami MSG

10
Tastes Satisfaction of Ancient Longings and
Needs
11
Tastebuds
12
Supertasters
13
THRESHOLDS
  • A function of receptors, neurons or higher levels
    of processing
  • With regards to thresholds, no person is like
    another

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FACTORS THAT CHANGE THRESHOLDS
  • AGE by age 75, you lose 2/3 of the tastebuds
    you had at 30
  • TEMPERATURE physiological temp. is optimal
  • SMOKING effects are temporary
  • NUMBER OF RECEPTORS some people have more

16
TYPES OF THRESHOLDS
  • Absolute
  • vision single candle metaphor
  • taste detection of sugar in water
  • Recognition (identification)
  • females are better at it than males
  • Difference
  • the JND--just noticeable difference

17
CULINARY APPLICATION OF THRESHOLDS
  • Hollandaise sauce example
  • add enough lemon juice that it is recognized
  • add only enough cayenne to be detectable
  • Good cuisine
  • many flavors should be subtle that is, past the
    absolute threshold but not past the recognition
    threshold

18
TASTE PHENOMENA
  • mixture suppression
  • wine and salad
  • adaptation
  • Coca-cola first and last sips
  • modification
  • artichokes, miracle berry
  • potentiation
  • MSG, 5 -nucleotides

19
USE OF TASTES TO INCREASE FLAVOR
  • Salt enhances flavor
  • Sugar is used to increase fruit flavor
  • Bitterness acts as a foil to sweetness
  • Sugar and acids are mutually suppressive
    (Sugar-acid ratio)

20
CHEMICAL SENSES AND TASTE
  • Capsaicin.................
  • Piperine....................
  • Zingiberone..............
  • Sinigrin.....................
  • Menthol....................
  • Carbon dioxide.........
  • Chili peppers
  • Piper nigrum
  • ginger
  • mustard, radishes
  • mint family
  • soft drinks, carbonated water

21
HOW IS PAIN SENSED?
  • Woe to the cook whose sauce has no sting.
    Chaucer
  • The filiform papillae have nerve endings
    sensitive to pain and temperature.
  • Pain-sensing neurons use substance P as a
    neurotransmitter. Continual firing depletes
    substance P, reducing pain.
  • This leads to a partial state of euphoria.

22
INTEGRATION OF TASTE SENSATIONS
  • unlike colors, there is no fusion or melding of
    sensations--at least not at the level of the
    sensory receptors

23
OTHER TASTES
  • Temperature
  • Somatosensory sensations

24
GUSTATION AND OLFACTION
  • Gustation taste. Gustare--to taste
  • Olfaction smell. Olfacere--to smell

25
MICROELECTRODE RECORDING
  • The labeled line theory
  • Problem with finding subjects
  • Carl Pfaffmans work with cats
  • exposed Chorda tympani found no sweet fibers
  • hypothesized that there is a firing
    pattern--gtfiring pattern theory

26
LABELED LINE THEORY--EVIDENCE
CON
PRO
  • Single neuron more responsive to single taste
    primary.
  • Receptors connected to the same fiber have
    similar sensitivities
  • A single fiber can be connected to several taste
    receptors
  • No detectable code responsive to sensory changes

27
PROJECTION TO BRAIN
  • Taste signals fork to
  • parietal cortex (like visual cortex). Partly
    responsible fo Identification, recognition, and
    memory of tastes.
  • limbic system (processing of emotions). Hedonic
    reactions.
  • Both cortex and limbic system are involved in
    i.d., recognition and memory

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