THE SCIENCE OF “TASTE”.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Tongue Brain Nose The Tongue - Tongue is the sense organ that detects flavor. many grooves on the surface - Inside the grooves there are many taste.
Advertisements

Smelly Facts Much of the thrill of kissing comes from smelling the unique odors of another's face. By simply smelling a piece of clothing, most people.
SMELL AND TASTE Jeffrey Zhao, Michael Dawkins, Ryan Fischer, Leah Politte, Sarah Mariani, Alexa Stanley.
Unit 2: Nervous System Taste & Smell & Touch. (1) Smell Smell = chemicals binding to receptors –“chemicals” = organic molecules Inside of your nose is.
Taste and Smell The Chemical Senses.
Other Senses W0w5oGVwJ_Q.
Warm Up: “Pepsi Challenge” Which do you like bettter?
Hursh Patel Sharon Li.  Why do you think taste and smell work so closely together?  How many taste buds does an average human have?  What is a Tastant?
What is the function of the Nervous System?. The nervous system is made of structures that control the actions and reactions of the body in response to.
Sponge: Set up Cornell Notes on pg. 53
The Remaining Senses Unit 6 Lesson 3. Objectives Review the physical properties of sound and light waves. Compare and contrast the senses of taste and.
TASTE AND SMELL
Chapter 6 Section 4: Other Senses. Taste: Savory Sensations Taste occurs because chemicals stimulate thousands of receptors in the mouth, primarily on.
Leah, Maggie, Quinn, Wesley, Victoria
The Human Senses. How does our body enable us to TASTE & SMELL? Sensory nerves associated with taste and smell are located in the mouth and nasal cavity.
What tastes Good? Smell and Taste Smell Olfactory.
Sensation & Perception: Our Other Senses
Touch, Taste, Smell, Balance ontent/senses/touch/
WARM UP 4/23 1. What gland produces tears? 2. What are the 1 st 3 cranial nerves? 3. What part of the brain is for balance? 4. What part of the brain reg.
Special Senses 12.1 Olfaction.
Other Senses AP Psychology| Mrs. Hensley. Touch When our skin is indented, pierced or experiences a change in temperature, our sense of touch is activated.
By: Fahad Al Thani.  Nervous system is for the senses and its composed of specialized cells called neurons that communicates information to and from.
The Other Senses. Taste: Gustatory System Physical stimuli→ chemical substances that are soluble Receptors→ taste cells found in the taste buds that line.
Taste/Gustation & Smell/Olfaction By: Jordan, Dalton, Miranda, and Tyler.
Chapter 7: The Sensory Systems
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. Senses  In order for humans to survive, their bodies must constantly monitor the environment  Sense organs interact with the nervous.
Nose, Tongue, and Taste Bud
The Chemical Senses… Smell and taste are sometimes referred to as the chemical senses because they respond to chemical molecules rather than to forms of.
The Peripheral Nervous System Subtitle. The Spinal Cord ▪ Function: to relay information to and from the brain ▪ Description: white cable around 43cm.
© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Unit 5: Body Systems Add the new notes to your table of contents, and then turn to the next clean page and set up your title and date.
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM.
Chemical Senses: Smell and Taste
Module 5 Sensation.
Taste --- What is the function of Taste?
The Human Senses: Taste.
THE CHEMICAL SENSES: TASTE AND SMELL
Sensory Analysis How to ensure a fair test when carrying out sensory analysis • It should take place in a quiet area, away from where the food was prepared.
Chapter 4 Section 4 & 5 Goal Four: Explain how the skin, chemical, kinesthetic, and vestibular senses work.
Sense of Taste A & P.
Special Senses Olfaction & Gustation.
How do organisms receive and respond to information from their environment? Yesterday and today you worked with your partners on stations that tested your.
Taste, Smell & Touch Lecture
The gustatory and olfactory systems
Taste: Smell: Touch.
Chemosense: Smell and Taste
The Senses – The Tongue.
The Special Senses: Taste and Smell
Other Senses Smell, Touch, Taste.
Taste, Smell, Touch.
Be able to label THE LOBES Process of sensation Energy stimulates sense organ Receptor cell sends signal along sensory nerves Signals enter the.
Unit 4: Sensation & Perception
CHAPTER 14 SECTION 14.1 SENSORY INFORMATION
Other Important Senses: Touch, Taste, and Smell
The Senses Ch. 18 Sect. 2.
ANATOMY Unit 2 NOTES: Taste, Touch, Smell
Unit 2 NOTES: Taste, Touch, Smell
The Five Senses.
11.8 Smell, taste and touch.
Chapter 6 Safeguarding Your Senses
The Nervous System N ai r a Naira Martins 4 B.
Taste.
Hearing Our auditory sense.
Section 3: Sensory Systems
Chemical senses – gustation (taste) and olfaction (smell)
Touch The body or somatic senses includes skin senses, which detect touch, temperature, and pain. Pacinian corpuscles, located beneath the skin, detect.
Special Senses Smell and Taste
CHAPTER 3 SENSATION.
Psychology Chapter 4 Section 4: Other Senese
Presentation transcript:

THE SCIENCE OF “TASTE”

Eating is a multi-sensory Experience Senses involved in eating: hearing, vision, taste, smell, touch, proprioception “Taste” is a survival mechanism: way to test food or other substances (poison, rot) Why would this be important? Because I don’t want to die yet… Eating involves: - visual affect of food, - feel and sound of the food in our mouth - taste of the food (1/5 tastes) “Taste” is a survival mechanism – a way to test food or other substances before they enter the body. Why would this be important?

A sense of smell… Smell helps us detect: - Dangerous odors - Rotten food 95% of “taste” is actually our sense of smell The actual sense of taste happens only in the mouth 95%

Can’t you just taste it? What do these foods have in common?

A taste to survive…. Bitter and sour tastes – could mean poison The Princess Bride (1987) – Poison scene Sweet = high energy carbohydrates Salty = essential minerals Umami = mother’s milk, comfort, emotional needs Spicy = ??? (Google “The Science of Spicy Food) Spicy is not actually a taste. It does have survival mechanism though... Plants use it to ward off unwelcome predators. Birds, who don’t react to the spice, carry the seeds for propagation of the plant.

How it taste works The surface of the tongue is covered with ____________ Papillae contain _______ buds Taste buds contain taste _____________ cells TRC contain “taste ________” “taste hairs” react to 5 different tastes: The surface of the tongue is covered with papillae Papillae contain taste buds Taste buds contain taste receptor cells TRC contain “taste hairs” “taste hairs” react to 5 different tastes- sweet salty sour bitter umami

The brain The Thalamus, meaning “inner chamber”, relays info for senses and movement to the cerebral cortex, along with regulating consciousness (sleep, alert, unconscious). The Cerebral Cortex: memory, attention, perception, thought, language, consciouness. It is the “Grey Matter” of the brain, and is on the outside.

Summarize: (cells, tongue, nerve pathways, brain stem, thalamus, gustatory cortex) Cells send taste signals through nerve pathways up the brain stem to the thalamus and into the gustatory cortex (area responsible for perceiving taste) Chemicals from food dissolved in our saliva before they enter the taste pores

How smell works How come certain smells trigger attached memories? (olfactory receptors  olfactory bulb) How come certain smells trigger attached memories? Olfactory receptors detect scent molecules in the air and send signals to the olfactory bulb in the front of the brain. Olfactory bulb is enveloped by the emotional area of the brain making a very strong connection to scent and memory.

Sense of touch Sensing _______, _____________ & ___________ Signals are sent along the __________________ nerves responsible for sensations in the face. Sensing spice, temperature & texture Signals are sent along the trigeminal nerves responsible for sensations in the face.

Sense of touch Tri – _____________ Gemini - __________ Tri – three, Gemini (latin) – twins, two of the same atom, (think gemini constellation)

Put them all together and… The 3 distinct nerve pathways: __________, ___________, ___________meet in the ___________cortex where we perceive flavour. The 3 distinct nerve pathways: Taste (gustatory pathway – several nerves), smell (olfactory receptors) and touch (trigeminal nerve) meet in the prefrontal cortex where w perceive flavour.

Experience of flavour Flavour is a combination of smell, taste, texture, temperature Other factors that affect flavour are: spice, setting, your mood, emotional, past experiences with that particular food item, and your genetic sensitivity to tastes.

Science of Taste

Video link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0HxAB54wlig