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A spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down with some
fancy tricks on your tongue, and your eyes.
Taste buds are clusters of up to 100 cells. Nerve fibers
connect each bud to the brain.
Sugars, and some synthetic sweeteners, interact with two
types of taste receptors on the tongue, according to a 2005 study published in
the journal Current Biology.
Some artificial sweeteners interact with only one tongue
receptor, which may explain why they don’t taste quite like the real sweet
stuff. Researchers found that the sweetener sucralose, found in Splenda,
interacts with both receptors.
The sweet-tasting buds do double duty as bitter-tasting
buds. Chemicals in the same taste buds help us tell the difference between a
bitter brussel sprout and a scoop of strawberry ice cream.
Scientists at Ohio State University identified a chemical
messenger in taste buds called cholecystokinin that tells the brain that
something bitter is on the tongue, while a different chemical, neuropeptide Y,
signals the brain that something sweet is being eaten.
Sometimes, sweetness is all in the eyes.
A study of people who sipped O.J.
of different shades of orange found the brightest juice tasted the sweetest.
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