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THE CHEMICAL SENSES: TASTE AND SMELL

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Presentation on theme: "THE CHEMICAL SENSES: TASTE AND SMELL"— Presentation transcript:

1 THE CHEMICAL SENSES: TASTE AND SMELL
The senses of taste (gustatory) and smell (olfactory) are stimulated by chemical substances interacting with the receptor cells of the tongue and nose, respectively

2 TASTE The sense of taste is designed not only to allow pleasurable, nourishing food in, but to keep dangerous, toxic foods out, of our digestive system → the stimuli for the sense of taste are soluble (dissolvable in water/saliva) food molecules

3 TASTE Inside each bump on your tongue are over 200 taste buds, each containing a pore with 50 to 100 receptor cells projecting tiny hairs → different receptors respond to the different taste sensations of sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami (savory, meaty taste)

4 TASTE → stimulation of receptor cells triggers neural impulses that pass through the thalamus on their way to the insular cortex in the frontal lobe

5 TASTE We are born with certain taste preferences, but individual preferences vary based on what we are exposed to socially and culturally, as well as our own taste bud density → we learn many preferences based on what we were fed when we were young

6 TASTE → taste bud density based on genetics also influences taste perceptions: supertasters with more receptor cells are more sensitive to certain tastes than nontasters who are less sensitive * Women and the young (we lose receptors as we age) are most likely to be STs

7 SMELL We smell (olfaction) something when its evaporated chemical substances enter our nostrils and dissolve in mucus → our olfactory receptor cells number 20 million and like taste cells are constantly being replaced

8 SMELL The hair-like receptor cells – olfactory cilia – cluster at the top of the nasal passage and respond selectively and in different combinations to specific aromas → the 10,000+ odors we can identify travel along the axons of receptors, then to the olfactory bulb and straight on to the olfactory cortex in the temporal lobe

9 SMELL * Unlike the other sensory systems, smell does NOT pass through the thalamus

10 SMELL Smell is closely associated with experience, emotion and memory: a positive experience or emotion linked with a scent causes us to like that scent → we have trouble identifying odors w/o our eyes, but we easily associate long forgotten odors and memories


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