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Salty, bitter, sweet and sour survive unscathed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2008

David A. Booth
Affiliation:
School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, West Midlands B15 2TT, United Kingdom. D.A.Booth@Bham.ac.UKhttp://psychology.bham.ac.uk/staff/davidbooth
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Abstract

Types of sensory receptor can only be identified by multidimensional discrimination of a familiar version of a sensed object from variants that disconfound putative types. By that criterion, there is as yet no evidence against just the four classic types of gustatory receptor, for sodium salts, alkaloids, sugars, and proton donors.

Type
Open Peer Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

The causal theory of perception is a dead-end

By itself, processing in the brain can never show how many types of taste there are. Philosophers (e.g., Hamlyn Reference Hamlyn1957) and psychologists (e.g., Gibson Reference Gibson1979) have long pointed out that visual perception cannot be projection onto a cinema screen in occipital cortex. This is a matter of logic, not science: the problem remains how we perceive the picture in that neural firing (even with “binding” across modules in visual areas). Equally, how does a taster get a taste out of a pattern across fibres? All that can be said from Erickson's account is that one pattern is transformed into another across-fibre pattern until we get to the neuromuscular transmission pattern that produces what speakers of the language have learnt to recognise as a name for a taste.

How we achieve knowledge of the world through the senses is an issue in the first instance of purely psychological science – characterising the unconscious and conscious cognitive processing that accounts for the externally observable performance of the individual. It is sensed materials in items of food and drink (Booth Reference Booth1994) that are perceived through gustation (Freeman et al. Reference Freeman, Richardson, Kendal-Reed and Booth1993), as well as for olfaction (Booth et al. Reference Booth, Freeman, Kendal-Reed, Rothe and Kruse1995) and touch (Booth Reference Booth and Dickinson2005; Richardson-Harman & Booth Reference Richardson-Harman and Booth2006). So the prior question is how people distinguish sources of tastes. Measurement of the mental causation involved is required in order to work out how the brain processes the signals on which such achievements depend.

Nobody has proposed a single fibre from a tastant receptor to a taste word

Despite caricatures by textbooks and even some neurophysiologists (e.g., Lemon & Smith Reference Lemon and Smith2006), a “labelled line” could not have meant a single fibre. This idea was put forward before the cell doctrine was established. The issue is whether any aspect of a human taster's performance can be controlled by a discrete signal from some set of compounds applied to the tongue. Like so many psychophysicists, Erickson neglects the cultural and cognitive aspects of sensory description. The design of his experiment fails to measure the way in which the assessor and the investigator “communicate” about reality by saying that a sample tastes sweet, salty, metallic, savoury, or whatever. Even on a simplistic behavioural account, the assessor has to have learned an association between materials containing compounds that stimulate the same type of gustatory receptor and the word that is used to name that set of tastants in the tasted sample. In cognitive reality, the naming of a taste can only succeed in the context of other sensory and conceptual processing, not least being the profile of activation of other receptor types that is almost inevitable by any one compound (Booth Reference Booth1995; Booth & Freeman Reference Booth and Freeman1993). Taste descriptors are a very mixed bag too, from biologically functional tastes like salty and bitter, through flavours and textures like lemony and astringent, to culinary concepts like savoury.

The hypothesis of four basic tastes emerged from nineteenth-century experimental psychologists ‘exploitation of chemists’ recent success in preparing pure compounds, instead of the unknown mixtures available to earlier cultures. Neither Erickson's approach nor the continuing ill-conceived advocacy of a fifth “umami” taste (Booth et al., submitted) is a biosocially adequate way to challenge that number four. Definitions of conceptual categories or counts of words do not address the factual question of how the compounds control the words. A control group is not the issue either. The problem is proper design of samples to be tasted by any one assessor (Booth et al. Reference Booth, Mobini, Earl and Wainwright2003).

Taste is not measured by arbitrary calculations from responses to under-designed samples

The experimental results in Erickson's review, even when reported in full, would be scientifically very thin. He asked students to “account for percentages of the taste” of a solution. It is well known that averaging such integrative responses across individuals creates artefacts and that totals of percentage judgments (let alone their group averages) do not measure performance. A treatment of such data without unwarranted assumptions would be to compare the largest percentage given by each individual between the same number (four) of criterial and non-criterial compounds. Considering that these are grouped data from an under-specified task, there are remarkable mutual dominances of sucrose and the sweet amino acid, proline, of the two sodium salts, NaCl and MSG, and of the two nitrogenous compounds quinine and ammonium chloride. Unfortunately, the only acids used were the “dirty” tasting HCl, the complex-tasting MSG, and the chloride salt of the weak base, ammonia. Nevertheless, the taste predominant in HCl uniquely was clearly evident in both MSG and NH4Cl. Thus, a valid interpretation of the data presented by Erickson supports the classic four types of tastant.

It should also be noted that MSG gave no evidence of being a fifth taste. Rather, it reduces to a balance of NaCl-dominated lysine, acids-dominated acetylglycine, sucrose-dominated proline, and quinine-dominated phenylalanine, as we have claimed (Booth et al., submitted; Freeman et al. Reference Freeman, Richardson, Kendal-Reed and Booth1993).

Erickson does not take account of the only method yet found for identifying discrete types of taste (or of colour, shape, aroma, musical chord, etc.). This is to show that there are ranges of concentrations of different tastants at which discrimination fails, in the general case among mixtures (Booth et al. Reference Booth, Freeman, Kendal-Reed, Rothe and Kruse1995; Reference Booth, Mobini, Earl and Wainwright2003; Booth & Freeman Reference Booth and Freeman1993) or in the special case of two or more single compounds of the same type (Breslin et al. Reference Breslin, Beauchamp and Pugh1996). The concentrations do not need to be matched empirically: it is much more efficient to estimate the indiscriminable ratio(s) by interpolation, using the determinate calculation of multi-psychophysical discrimination distances from the internal standard (Booth et al., submitted; Booth & Freeman, Reference Booth and Freeman1993). Until Erickson's tastants are tested this way, there are no perceptual data by which to evaluate the molecular evidence for gustatory receptor types on the human tongue and to start tracking multiple-fibre codes around the brain.

References

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