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Taste and Smell The Chemical Senses The Chemical Senses • Specialized to detect chemicals dissolved in a fluid • The fluid may be saliva, mucous, or blood plasma • Rely on receptors that interact with specific molecules to generate an action potential • Receptors are integrated with two or more tissue types making them fit the definition of “organ” Example: G protein-coupled receptor Smell (Olfaction) • Detected by thousands of chemoreceptors located in the upper wall of the nasal cavities • Receptors located in a small space about ½ square inch and are associated with other cells to form the olfactory organs • These receptors are capable of gathering up to 50 individual sensations which are combined in the brain to an almost infinite number of smells Smell • The number of individual sensations decreases with age and varies with individuals • The receptor cells are neurons embedded within the mucous membrane of the nasal epithelium • The dendrites of these cells are known as olfactory hairs, which physically interact with odorants, and the axons extend into the olfactory bulb of the brain (Animation) Olfactory Pathway • Inhaling causes gas molecules to move into the nasal cavity where they dissolve into mucous • Begins with olfactory hairs of receptor cells interacting with molecules; if an action potential is generated, it will move up to the olfactory bulb, located beneath the origin of the olfactory nerves Olfactory Pathway • From the olfactory bulb the impulse continues along to the frontal lobes of the cerebral cortex for interpretation • This makes smells linked very powerfully to memories • Video: How Many Smells Can We Smell? Taste • The sense of taste is also known as gustation • Often works with smell to gain a complete analysis of the sensation • Special organs of taste are known as “taste buds” and approximately 10,000 are located on the surface of the tongue within small elevations known as papillae • Other taste buds may be found on the roof of the mouth and walls of the pharynx Taste • Each taste bud has several taste receptors, known as gustatory cells • The free ends of gustatory cells have microvilli, called taste hairs that project through an opening in the taste bud known as a taste pore • At the base of the gustatory cells is a network of sensory nerve fiber endings (Animation) Taste • There are five primary tastes: sweet, sour, bitter, salty, and savory (or umami) • Combinations of these sensations produce distinct flavors along with the sense of smell Gustatory Pathway • If an action potential is produced by a gustatory cell, the nerve impulse travels up the cranial nerve to the medulla oblongata before being directed to the gustatory center in the cerebral cortex