3.3 Smell and TASTE Flashcards

1
Q

smell

A

impression formation
chemical sense
guides eating behaviour
more close to emotions than others

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2
Q

smell stimulus

A

chemical doors in gas

latest work suggests 4-10 primaries

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3
Q

Henning classification

A

prism classification
simple doors on outside
problem: odors are subjective, and the dimensions in the model are arbitrary

Putrid, fruity, fragrant, spicy, resinous – burnt

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4
Q

stereochemical theory of classification

A

by amour
based on chemical structures

camphoraceous (mothballs) 
pungent (vinegar) 
floral (Roses) 
ethereal (fruity) 
minty (peppermint) 
musty (musk) 
putrid (rott) 

each onerous molecule has specific shape and aligns with specific receptor (not supported by evidence)

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5
Q

olfactory system

A

odours come from nostrils
olfactory epithelium: contains smell receptors

olfactory bulb: actual brain component, where epithelium go

Goes to thalamus, frontal cortex, hypothalamus
and amygdala

connection between motivation, emotion, memory, and smell

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6
Q

smell receptors

A

1 receptor type (humans have 5 million)
each have cilia (location of reception)

DIRECT contact between stimulus and receptors

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7
Q

absolute threshold of smell

A

depends on substance and amount of substance
doesn’t equate identification ability
individual differences exist

ID: results of vocabulary processes, not familiarity

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8
Q

difference threshold of smell

A

20-30 percent (very large) for difference to be noticed

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9
Q

adaptation of smell

A
super quick (within a second) can go lower than detection threshold
only for faint odors
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10
Q

taste primaries

A

sweet, bitter, salty, sour (and maybe umami)

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11
Q

receptors of taste:

A
taste buds (little bumps: papillae) 
types: foliate, village, fungiform, filiform) 
tip of buds are in the pit of the papillae 

humans have 10,000 taste buds that last 10 days `

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12
Q

areas of tongue to perceive primary

A

bitter: roof of mouth
sour: sides of mouth
sweet: tip of mouth
salty: front of mouth

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13
Q

taste coding

A

all receptors react at varying levels

the code is the relative activation of each type

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14
Q

taste pathway

A

mouth - hypothalamus - thalamus - prefrontal cortex - insulation - amygdala

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15
Q

thresholds for taste

A

low sensitivity in salty and sweet, high with bitter
depends on vocabulary as well
difference: 15-25% (salt is adaptive)

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16
Q

factors that affect taste and smell

A

taste-smell interaction = flavour
smell = more door if coloured
taste = red sugar = sweeter

temp = more sensitivity at room temperature