The
nose knows: How your sense of smell impacts taste By Lacie Glover Published
June 12, 2015.
In
the early 1900s German scientist D.P. Hanig had volunteers taste salty, bitter,
sour, and sweet foods and tell him where on their tongues they tasted each food
most. Then, Harvard psychologist Edwin G. Boring converted those answers into a
map of the tongue that purported to show which part of the tongue was
responsible for tasting each flavor. That tongue map is still in circulation
today, all over the web. The problem is that Boring's map was only intended to
indicate sensitivities, not exclusive taste regions, but it was quickly
misinterpreted as such. Before long, even scientists of the day were mistaken
in believing that there were specific taste regions on the tongue, and perhaps
even different types of taste buds. . The tongue map isn't something we talk
about anymore in medical school because it's inaccurate," says Dr. Joseph
K. Han, an otolaryngologist and professor at Eastern Virginia Medical School
(EVMS) in Norfolk. Taste, he says, is not as simple as that tongue map makes it
seem. How taste really works Those little bumps on your tongue are not your
taste buds; they are called papillae. The taste buds are inside the papillae,
below the surface of your tongue, and are connected to nerves. Papillae are not
actually bumps- they're shaped like small funnels that deliver your food's
molecules to the taste buds inside. Tiny taste bud organs then interact with
the molecules and send a signal to your brain about what you're tasting.
Your taste buds can all pick up the standard salty, bitter, sour and sweet,
in addition to savory- the flavor left off the map. Some areas of the tongue
are more sensitive to some flavors, but that's still only half of the equation.
"When we talk about taste, there's a lot more to it than that," says
Han, who is also the director of the division of rhinology and endoscopic sinus
and skull base surgery at EVMS. The science of scent When you taste something
unique, Han says, you're actually smelling it. "Try holding your nose shut
the next time you have a piece of chocolate. It won't taste the
same,” he says. When you smell a delicious food, it prepares you for
the delight of eating it. "You taste the food first by smelling it,"
says Han. "Pizza tastes good because it smells like pizza first, before it
even hits your tongue. When you can't smell, your ability to taste is
inhibited, so any smell disorder is also a taste disorder. "When you have
allergies, sinusitis or a head cold, you're experiencing reduced tasting
ability," Han says. Most often smell and taste disorders are temporary,
but they are sometimes permanent, like in the case of chronic sinusitis, or
sinus inflammation. Taste sensitivity also appears to decline after age 50.
There are some dangers when you can't smell correctly. For example, you
might miss the whiff of warning that milk has soured or a food has spoiled,
which could lead to a food borne illness when you ingest it. Human noses have
also evolved to protect us from external danger. "When my patients tell me
they can't smell, I tell them to make sure their smoke detectors are
working," Han says. Overall, though, smell and taste disorders are rarely
serious, mostly hindering quality of life by depriving you of the flavors you
love. And to find those, you don't need a map. You just need your own nose and
mouth.
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