Thibodeau Margaret, Bajec Martha, Saliba Anthony, Pickering Gary
Department of Biological Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 3A1, Canada.
Department of Biological Sciences, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario L2S 3A1, Canada; Present Address: Bajec Senseworks Consulting, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Physiol Behav. 2020 Dec 1;227:113160. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113160. Epub 2020 Aug 27.
Thermal tasting, an important type of individual variation in orosensation, is a phenomenon by which some individuals perceive thermally-induced taste sensations simply by having the tip of their tongue warmed or cooled. These individuals, known as thermal tasters, report a variety of thermally-elicited tastes (typically sweet, sour, salty, bitter, metallic) and the tastes reported can vary with the temperature regime used (warming or cooling) and location on the tongue tested. Importantly, when compared to thermal non-tasters, thermal tasters are more responsive to aqueous solutions of basic tastants and to beverages. The mechanism(s) underlying thermal tasting are not well understood and it is unknown if the increased orosensory responsiveness of thermal tasters is universal or if it is driven by a subgroup of thermal tasters. Thermal taste data from 12 previous studies was combined to obtain a large sample of thermal tasters (n = 254) who were divided into subgroups based on the type of thermally-elicited taste reported and the temperature regime/location at which it was experienced. Sweet thermal tasters (n = 77) were 9 times more likely than non-sweet thermal tasters (n = 177) to experience thermally-elicited sensations during lingual warming (p < 0.0001). Similarly, sour thermal tasters (n = 89) were 8 times more likely than non-sour thermal tasters (n = 165) to report thermally induced tastes during cooling (p<0.0001). However, no differences in orosensory responsiveness based on these or other subgroups were identified, suggesting that the heightened orosensory responsiveness of thermal tasters may be centrally-mediated. We discuss how these findings inform our understanding of the mechanism(s) underlying thermal taste and the identification of thermal taste subgroups, along with practical implications of methodological differences in determining thermal taste status.
热味觉是口腔感觉中一种重要的个体差异现象,即一些人仅通过将舌尖加热或冷却就能感知热诱导的味觉。这些人被称为热味觉者,他们会报告各种热诱发的味道(通常是甜、酸、咸、苦、金属味),所报告的味道会因使用的温度模式(加热或冷却)以及测试舌头的部位而有所不同。重要的是,与非热味觉者相比,热味觉者对碱性味觉剂的水溶液和饮料更敏感。热味觉的潜在机制尚不清楚,热味觉者增强的口腔感觉反应性是普遍存在的,还是由一部分热味觉者驱动的,目前也不清楚。我们整合了之前12项研究的热味觉数据,以获得大量热味觉者样本(n = 254),并根据所报告的热诱发味道类型以及体验该味道时的温度模式/部位将他们分为不同亚组。甜热味觉者(n = 77)在舌部加热期间经历热诱发感觉的可能性是非甜热味觉者(n = 177)的9倍(p < 0.0001)。同样,酸热味觉者(n = 89)在冷却期间报告热诱导味道的可能性是非酸热味觉者(n = 165)的8倍(p < 0.0001)。然而,未发现基于这些或其他亚组的口腔感觉反应性存在差异,这表明热味觉者增强的口腔感觉反应性可能是由中枢介导的。我们讨论了这些发现如何增进我们对热味觉潜在机制的理解以及热味觉亚组的识别,同时还讨论了在确定热味觉状态时方法学差异的实际影响。