• What happens when food first touches you

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Thu Jul 9 21:30:30 2020
    What happens when food first touches your tongue

    Date:
    July 9, 2020
    Source:
    Ohio State University
    Summary:
    A new study might explain why humans register some tastes more
    quickly than others, potentially due to each flavor's molecular
    size. The research also provided explanation as to why humans
    register taste more quickly when food or drink moves over their
    tongues quickly, as compared to when they are held in their mouth
    steadily.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    A new study might explain why humans register some tastes more quickly
    than others, potentially due to each flavor's molecular size.


    ==========================================================================
    The research, published last month in the journal PLOS Computational
    Biology, also provided explanation as to why humans register taste more
    quickly when food or drink moves over their tongues quickly, as compared
    to when they are held in their mouth steadily.

    The findings indicate that both the speed with which food and drink move
    in our mouth and the size of the molecules in the food that we consume
    affect our ability to taste.

    "Our tongue has papillae on it that act like a sea of kelp in an ocean,"
    said Kai Zhao, lead author of the paper and an associate professor of otolaryngology at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. "Those papillae -- the small bumps that contain taste buds on the human tongue
    -- move and sway as food or drink flow past them." The human tongue
    has four kinds of papillae; three of those contain taste buds.

    (The fourth kind is the most numerous on the tongue, and functions
    primarily as a way to increase friction.) For this study, the researchers modeled the way flavors move around the papillae in the tongue, using a
    range of salty and sweet stimuli. The researchers also built a computer
    model that simulated previous studies around taste perception.



    ==========================================================================
    The model considered the human tongue as a porous surface, with the
    spaces between the papillae acting like the holes of a sponge. Then the researchers simulated what would happen if they passed a range of salty
    and sweet flavors over that surface, first quickly, in one intense rush,
    then slowly.

    They found that passing flavors over the tongue quickly caused the
    flavors to penetrate into the papillae gaps quicker, and that would
    register flavor more quickly.

    And their findings could explain why taste buds were quicker to register
    a sweet compound with small molecular size as compared with those with
    large molecular size, such as salty flavors.

    "Smaller molecules may diffuse quicker, and we think this could be the
    reason they move through the papillae gaps more quickly," Zhao said.

    This study focused on the early stages of taste -- what happens before
    taste buds have even registered a flavor. Compared with the other
    senses -- sight and sound, for example -- taste operates on a sort of time-delay. We hear a sound almost as soon as it is emitted; it takes
    our taste buds a little longer to register flavor.



    ========================================================================== "That early response is changed depending on how the molecules of what
    we are consuming interact with the tongue's surface," Zhao said. "It is
    a complex process." Prior to this study, scientists knew that if they
    dropped a flavored solution onto a person's tongue, the intensity of
    that solution's taste would increase over time. But they did not know
    why that happened.

    Zhao said scientists assumed the increase in flavor had something to
    do with papillae, so for this study, his lab focused on studying the
    mechanics of how papillae work.

    "Our taste buds are important," he said. "They help us figure out
    what food to eat, how much food to eat, and how to balance the body's nutritional needs with its energy needs." Taste buds also help humans
    avoid poisonous substances, can help identify edible and nutritious
    foods, and contribute to the cravings humans feel for things like ice
    cream and potato chips.

    Zhao said his lab decided to focus on the early stages of taste because
    it is connected to so many other public health issues, including nutrition
    and obesity.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Ohio_State_University. Original
    written by Laura Arenschield. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Zhenxing Wu, Kai Zhao. Taste of time: A porous-medium model
    for human
    tongue surface with implications for early taste perception. PLOS
    Computational Biology, 2020; 16 (6): e1007888 DOI: 10.1371/
    journal.pcbi.1007888 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200709135633.htm

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