Well, taste is one of the five senses (taste, smell, sight, touch, and sound). "Taste buds" are parts of your tongue that are involved in taste. But they are not the only part. Here is a good explanation from "Taste." U*X*L Complete Life Science Resource. Eds. Leonard C. Bruno and Julie Carnagie. Vol. 3. Detroit: U*X*L, 2001. 3 pp. 3 vols. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Gale. Evanston Public Library. 10 Jan. 2008" "HOW THE SENSE OF TASTE WORKS Humans are born with the ability to taste. The sense of taste begins with the tongue. The skin over this muscular organ located inside the mouth is covered with about 10,000 receptor cells, or chemical-sensing bodies. These are called taste buds. Each of these funnel-shaped clusters has an opening called a taste pore. Molecules (small particles) of dissolved substances, containing chemicals, flow into these holes and trigger, or activate, a receptor cell. The taste buds also respond to other stimuli. When people smell or think of a food they like, their mouth starts to water. This means that people start to produce saliva. In order for humans to actually taste something, it has to be dissolved in saliva. Like smell (called olfaction), taste (also called gustation) operates on the principle of chemoreception. Certain receptors are triggered when chemicals contact them. It was once thought that certain parts of the tongue responded only to one of the four basic categories or sensations of taste (sweet, sour, bitter, salty). Now it is thought that individual receptors are not specifically sensitive to only one sensation. Unless the brain is involved in this process, a person will not be able to actually identify anything he or she has dissolved on the tongue. Science still does not know exactly how this occurs. Somehow, when a dissolved molecule triggers a taste bud, or cell, certain nerves at the root of the cell are also stimulated. These carry impulses to the brain stem, then to the thalamus or the front of the brain stem. The impulses finally end up in the cerebral cortex of the brain, the brain's taste control center. The brain interprets this signal, or impulse, and tells people what they are tasting. As with each of the senses, all of this happens instantaneously." Hope this helps! Reference Librarian
Evanston Public Library
Evanston, Illinois
If you mean how do food manufactures get testers to taste food, they give them a choice of food products and get them to test it and put the foods in order of what they liked most and liked least. They also get them to drink water in-between eating so it does not affect the taste of the next product. Sorry if this hasn't helped.
The taste buds on your tongue has nerve receptors which transmits the taste to the brain where it is decides what the food you ate tastes like.
we taste them by licking nd chewing the food so are taste buds process what we are eating.
Their tounge(and sences)
the sense of taste begins with the taste buds on the tongue and othere receptor cells are found on the throat
No. Insects "taste" with their antennae - which can function to both taste and smell, but they don't have actual taste buds
No. Insects "taste" with their antennae - which can function to both taste and smell, but they don't have actual taste buds
The front taste buds taste salty and sweet foods. The sides of your tongue taste sour foods. The taste buds on the back of your tongue taste bitter foods.
Bitter taste buds are found at the back of the tongue. Sweet/salty taste buds are in the front of the tongue, sour taste buds are on both sides whereas the middle of the tongue has very few taste buds at all.
No, taste buds do not digest food, your stomach acids do.
we taste them by licking nd chewing the food so are taste buds process what we are eating.
They are taste buds, so you can taste all the goodness in your food
taste buds
the taste buds is a suppilers with nerves. when wet food passes through these taste buds, the nerve fibres carry the sensations of taste to the brain.
It is not your taste buds that dislike food but rather it is your brain
No, you need taste buds, not saliva to taste food.
You have taste buds on your tongue.
Grasshoppers do not have taste buds. They consume their food strictly out of instinct, without a need to taste it.
Taste buds have receptors for certain things found in food. Some taste buds respond to the pH of a food telling you if the food is acidic (sour) or basic (bitter). There are also taste buds that respond to sugar, salt and unami (asparagus). Each person is different in whether they like certain combinations of the 5 basic tastes.
toungue or taste buds maybe ?
they have taste buds, just like us humans.