homehome Home chatchat Notifications


New research identifies the 'taste center' of our brains

Sweet!

Alexandru Micu
March 15, 2019 @ 8:42 pm

share Share

While brain regions handling sight, hearing, and other sensory systems have been mapped in the human brain, the one for taste has eluded us. New research, however, reports having pinpointed this “gustatory” cortex and its functions.

Snacks.

Image via Pixabay.

By merging together data from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with statistical methods, a team of U.S. researchers has mapped out the brain regions responsible for handling different tastes in the insular cortex.

Tasty

“We have known that tastes activate the human brain for some time, but not where primary taste types such as sweet, sour, salty and bitter are distinguished,” said Adam Anderson, professor of human development at Cornell University and senior author of the study

“By using some new techniques that analyze fine-grained activity patterns, we found a specific portion of the insular cortex — an older cortex in the brain hidden behind the neocortex — represents distinct tastes.”

The insular cortex has a role to play in modulating emotional and visceral experiences. In Anderson’s words, it “represents experiences from inside our bodies,” and, as such, has been suspected to be the primary area for handling taste. Previous work has shown that this cortex processes information originating from inside our own bodies; input from our hearts and lungs, for example, gets crunched in this area.

Given the insular cortex’s occupational background, the team wanted to confirm whether or not it also handles the sensation of taste. Their results suggest that this is indeed the case, with the team finding evidence of a “sweet spot” — a specific area where a large ensemble of neurons respond to sweetness stimulation on the tongue — in this brain region.

“While we identified a potential ‘sweet’ spot, its precise location differed across people and this same spot responded to other tastes, but with distinct patterns of activity,” Anderson said. “To know what people are tasting, we have to take into account not only where in the insula is stimulated, but also how.”

Compared to previous studies (performed on animal models) which found clusters of brain cells that respond to basic tastes, the team found a much more complex activation pattern in the human brain as a response to taste. Anderson says that the insular region they’ve pinpointed responds to multiple types of flavours.

The team says that seeing taste being processed in the insular cortex suggests that the way we perceive taste is associated not only with what’s on our tongue but also with specific needs inside our body — namely, what nutrients our body is running low on.

The paper “Distinct representations of basic taste qualities in human gustatory cortex” has been published in the journal Nature Communications.

share Share

A New Antibiotic Was Hiding in Backyard Dirt and It Might Save Millions

A new antibiotic works when others fail.

Researchers Wake Up Algae That Went Dormant Before the First Pyramids

Scientists have revived 7,000-year-old algae from Baltic Sea sediments, pushing the limits of resurrection ecology.

A Fossil So Strange Scientists Think It’s From a Completely New Form of Life

This towering mystery fossil baffled scientists for 180 Years and it just got weirder.

ChatGPT Seems To Be Shifting to the Right. What Does That Even Mean?

ChatGPT doesn't have any political agenda but some unknown factor is causing a subtle shift in its responses.

This Freshwater Fish Can Live Over 120 Years and Shows No Signs of Aging. But It Has a Problem

An ancient freshwater species may be quietly facing a silent collapse.

The US wants to know if researchers in other countries follow MAGA doctrine

Science and policy are never truly free from one another. But one country's policy doesn't typically cross borders.

A Week of Cold Plunges Could Help Your Cells Fight Aging and Disease

Cold exposure "trains" cells to be more efficient at cleaning themselves up.

England will start giving morning-after pill for free

Free contraception in the UK clashes starkly with the US under Trump's shadow.

Japan’s Cherry Blossoms Are Blooming Earlier Than Ever. Guess Why

Climate change is disrupting natural cycles.

The most successful space telescope you never heard of just shut down

An astronomer says goodbye to Gaia, the satellite that mapped the galaxy.