CASS Food Research Centre, School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia.
Nutr Rev. 2024 May 10;82(6):831-847. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nuad097.
Individuals vary in their ability to taste, and some individuals are more sensitive to certain tastes than others. Taste sensitivity is a predictor of various factors, such as diet, eating behavior, appetite regulation, and overall health. Furthermore, taste sensitivity can fluctuate within an individual over short to long periods of time: for example, in daily (diurnal) cycles, monthly (menstrual) cycles (in females), and yearly (seasonal) cycles. Understanding these temporal patterns is important for understanding individual eating habits and food preferences, particularly in the context of personalized and precision nutrition. This review provides a summary of the literature on taste sensitivity patterns across 3 temporal dimensions: daily, monthly, and yearly. Good evidence for diurnal patterns has been observed for sweet taste and fat taste, although the evidence is limited to rodent studies for the latter. Obese populations showed limited variation to sweet and fat taste sensitivities over a day, with limited variation in sweet taste sensitivity being linked to insulin resistance. There were mixed observations of temporal variation in sensitivity to sour and umami tastes, and there were no patterns in sensitivity to bitter taste. Menstrual patterns in sweet taste sensitivity were consistent with patterns in food intake. Other taste modality investigations had mixed findings that had little agreement across studies. Hormonal changes in females influence taste sensitivity to some degree, although the overall patterns are unclear. Seasonal patterns have been less well studied, but there is weak evidence that sweet, salty, and bitter taste sensitivities change across seasons. Differences in seasonal taste patterns have been observed in subgroups susceptible to mental health disorders, requiring further investigation. Patterns of taste sensitivity are evident across multiple temporal dimensions, and more research is needed to determine the influence of these patterns on food intake. Dysregulation of these patterns may also be a marker of certain diseases or health conditions, warranting further investigation. Notably, the alimentary tastes (umami, fat, and carbohydrate) are underrepresented in this research area and require additional investigation.
个体在味觉能力上存在差异,有些人对某些味道比其他人更敏感。味觉敏感性是多种因素的预测指标,如饮食、饮食行为、食欲调节和整体健康。此外,味觉敏感性在个体短时间到长时间内会波动:例如,在日常(昼夜)周期、每月(女性的月经)周期和每年(季节性)周期中。了解这些时间模式对于了解个体的饮食习惯和食物偏好很重要,特别是在个性化和精准营养的背景下。本综述总结了关于味觉敏感性在三个时间维度(日常、每月和每年)的文献。已经观察到甜味和脂肪味的昼夜模式具有良好的证据,尽管后者的证据仅限于啮齿动物研究。肥胖人群在一天中对甜味和脂肪味的敏感性变化有限,对甜味敏感性的有限变化与胰岛素抵抗有关。对酸味和鲜味敏感性的时间变化存在混合观察结果,苦味敏感性没有模式。月经期间甜味敏感性与食物摄入量的模式一致。其他味觉模态的研究结果不一致,不同研究之间几乎没有一致性。女性的激素变化在某种程度上影响味觉敏感性,尽管总体模式尚不清楚。季节性模式研究较少,但有微弱的证据表明甜味、咸味和苦味敏感性会随季节变化。在易患心理健康障碍的亚组中观察到了季节性味觉模式的差异,需要进一步研究。在多个时间维度上都存在味觉敏感性模式,需要进一步研究这些模式对食物摄入的影响。这些模式的失调也可能是某些疾病或健康状况的标志,值得进一步研究。值得注意的是,在这个研究领域中,味觉(鲜味、脂肪和碳水化合物)的代表性不足,需要进一步研究。