Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate how odor stimulation affects taste perception. Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals were measured from the frontal region of the head in normal, healthy subjects, and frequency analyses were performed. Each odor stimulation was delivered while the subject was tasting chocolate, using chocolate paste as the odorant for ‘matched odor stimulation,’ and garlic paste for ‘unmatched odor stimulation.’ Differences in EEG signals appeared between the matched and unmatched arms of the study. Comparison of the frequencies of EEGs captured under the condition of unmatched odor stimulation with those captured under the condition of matched odor stimulation showed that the occupancy rate of the theta-frequency band under the condition of unmatched odor stimulation was higher than that under the condition of matched odor stimulation. Interestingly, a negative correlation existed between the occupancy rate of the theta-frequency band and the subjective feeling of chocolate sweetness. The present findings suggest that when humans receive odors that do not match with the foods being consumed, subjective feelings are disturbed and theta-band brain activity is increased while the unmatched information is cross-checked.
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Introduction
Taste and smell are fundamental senses by which humans obtain chemical information. Feelings of deliciousness when consuming foods can thus be produced by the perception of the chemical information extracted from the foods themselves. The molecules causing taste and smell bind to gustatory and olfactory receptors expressed on the tongue and olfactory epithelium, respectively. The resulting chemical signals are first conveyed to the primary gustatory and olfactory cortices, following which the information is processed at higher levels of the cortex [1,2,3,4]. The gustatory and olfactory cortices are strongly connected to the limbic system and, accordingly, these chemical senses are also strongly connected with emotion [5, 6]. The limbic system plays important roles in memory storage, retrieval, recognition and the production of various emotional feelings [2, 7,8,9]. The perceived deliciousness of food may therefore be partly based on memory and emotion with regard to the food in question, formed by personal experience.
Many foods contain specific substances that produce their own particular taste and odor. Food odor can increase the taste intensity of food [10, 11] by acting through cross-modal interactions [12, 13]. Humans recognize foods by referring to the combination of taste and smell [14]. When the smell of a food differs from the smell that the food is usually associated with, we may experience difficulty in recognizing that food. In such cases, the processing of chemical information might be disturbed. However, the precise mechanisms involved in such disturbances remain unexplained.
Chocolate is a familiar food that is usually associated with feelings of pleasantness and an increased positive mood [15, 16]. In addition, chocolate can be easily identified by its specific combination of smell and taste. Therefore, in the present study we focused on chocolate as tastant. The deliciousness of chocolate experienced by the person consuming the chocolate may be enhanced or attenuated, depending on the associated smells. The frequency of electroencephalogram (EEG) signals is related to underlying activities of the brain; as such, EEG signals can be used to investigate perceptual, cognitive and emotional functions [17,18,19,20,21].
In the study reported here, we used Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) analysis to investigate how changes in the feelings associated with a taste correlate with brain activities when an unmatched odor stimulation is introduced into the association.
Materials and methods
All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. The institutional ethics committee at Tokushima University approved the study reported here (No. 2575-2]. Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.
Nine healthy participants with a mean (± standard deviation [SD]) age of 30.2 ± 12.3 years were enrolled in experiments using chocolate as a tastant, and another nine healthy participants with a mean age of 33.3 ± 15.8 years were included in control experiments in which no tastant was used. EEGs were recorded from the frontal region of the scalp (Fp1, Fp2) using an Alphatec IV EEG recorder [Brain Function Research & Development Center [BFRDC], Osaka, Japan]. Frequency analyses of the EEGs were performed with a MinD Sensor V (BFRDC). During one session (60 s), data were collected every 1 s. The sampling rate was 1024 Hz. EEG epochs with artifacts were automatically identified, and artifact-free EEG epochs were used in the frequency analysis.
During the experiments, participants were seated in a body sonic chair (RFRESH1 Excellent, Tokyo, Japan) and listened to consonant music for relaxation. Milk chocolate (Morinaga & Co., Tokyo, Japan) was used as a tastant. Chocolate paste (Morinaga & Co.) was used as an odorant in the ‘matched odor stimulation’ arm, and garlic paste (House Food Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) was used as an odorant in the ‘unmatched odor stimulation’ arm. At the start of the session, the participant put a small piece of chocolate in his/her mouth and tasted it. For odor stimulation, the odorant was smeared onto cosmetic paper and placed close to the nose of the participant. EEGs were recorded for 60 s per session. After the session, the participant was asked to rate the perception of chocolate sweetness as a ‘chocolate sweetness score’ on a scale of 1–5 (0, no feeling of chocolate sweetness; + 5, extreme feeling of chocolate sweetness). As a reference for chocolate sweetness, participants were asked to consider the sweetness of chocolate with no odor stimulation as a chocolate sweetness score of 2.5. As a control experiment, odor stimulation with chocolate paste or garlic paste was delivered in the same way as mentioned above to participants without taste stimulation (no chocolate in the mouth), and EEGs were recorded for 60 s per session. As another control experiment, EEGs were recorded for 60 s per session while the participant was tasting chocolate in the absence of any odor stimulation.
When a small piece of chocolate is carried to the mouth, olfactory receptors detect the odor of the chocolate retronasally [22]. All participants were able to distinguish the odors of milk chocolate (retronasal) and chocolate paste (orthonasal) when the odors were presented separately. However, the retronasal pathway provides a smaller olfactory input than the orthonasal pathway [23, 24]. We therefore adopted cases using no odorants to represent the condition of no odor stimulation.
Individual EEG band frequencies were analyzed from 4 to 23 Hz. The occupancy rate of each frequency was calculated as the power of each frequency divided by the summed power for all frequencies. The ratio was defined as the unit occupancy rate (%). Activity in each frequency was first assessed by the unit occupancy rate per second. Then unit occupancy rates through one session (60 s) were averaged; these averaged data were used to determine the occupancy rate (%) in this study. Details on EEG recordings and data analysis have been described previously by Yoshimura et al. [25].
Results
Data were collected from nine healthy participants in experiments in which chocolate was used as a tastant. In order to have a standard reference point, each participant was asked to rate the chocolate sweetness score of the tastant as 2.5 under the condition of tasting the chocolate without odor stimulation. The chocolate sweetness score under the condition of odor stimulation was then rated relative to that reference point of 2.5. Subjective feelings of chocolate sweetness were compared between conditions of unmatched odor stimulation and matched odor stimulation. For all participants, chocolate sweetness scores under the condition of matched odor stimulation were higher than the reference score. Conversely, chocolate sweetness scores under the condition of unmatched odor stimulation were lower than the reference score. Differences in chocolate sweetness scores between the two conditions were significant for all nine participants based on analyses using Origin8 software (OriginLab Co., Northampton, MA USA): 1.1 ± 0.49 (mean ± standard deviation) (matched) vs. 3.9 ± 0.33 (unmatched); paired t test, p = 4 × 10−6 (Fig. 1). Interestingly, in addition to decreased feelings of sweetness, participants showed a tendency to be unable to specifically discern what the food was under the condition of unmatched odor stimulation.
Objective differences between unmatched odor stimulation and matched odor stimulation conditions were apparent in the EEG signals collected from the nine healthy participants. Profiles of mean occupancy rates obtained from the frequency analysis are shown in Fig. 2a, b. Figure 2c shows the profiles of the two conditions superimposed. In the present study, we focused on theta, alpha and beta frequency bands. To assess the occupancy rate of the respective frequency bands, we calculated the areas surrounded by the lines of occupancy rates and the frequency axis (Hz × %) and termed the result the ‘areal occupancy rate’ (Fig. 2c). Mean areal occupancy rates of the respective frequency bands under conditions of unmatched and matched olfactory stimulations are shown in Fig. 2d. To investigate which frequency bands of EEG reflected different patterns of olfactory stimulation, we then subtracted the areal occupancy rates under the condition of unmatched odor stimulation from those under the condition of matched odor stimulation and compared the results. Mean differences for theta, alpha and beta bands were 5.25 ± 4.48, − 2.83 ± 2.49 and − 3.49 ± 4.01 (mean ± SD), respectively. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) using Origin8 software was used to evaluate the statistical significance of the ‘areal difference values’ in the three frequency bands. Statistical differences in areal difference values were identified (F = 15.1; P = 5.7 × 10−5). Scheffe’s post hoc test was then used to detect significant differences between areal difference values in the respective frequency bands. These analyses revealed that differences in areal difference values between unmatched and matched odor stimulation conditions were significantly greater in the theta frequency band than in the other frequency bands (alpha: F = 10.4, P = 5.5 × 10−4; beta: F = 12.2, P = 2.2 × 10−4), suggesting that unmatched olfactory stimulation enhanced EEG activities in the theta frequency band.
Subjective differences (Fig. 1) and objective differences (Fig. 2) may be correlated. In other words, brain activities in the theta band might correlate with a disturbance in taste perception when unmatched odor stimulation was applied. Correlations between the chocolate sweetness score and areal occupancy rate in the theta, alpha and beta bands were therefore examined. In the theta frequency, a negative correlation was seen between the chocolate sweetness score and areal occupancy rate (n = 18, R2 = 0.282, F = 7.69, P = 0.01; Fig. 3a). Correlations between the chocolate sweetness scores and areal occupancy rate in the alpha frequency band were examined in the same way, revealing that there was no correlation between the chocolate sweetness score and areal occupancy rate in this frequency band (n = 18; R2 = 0.038, F = 1.66, P = 0.22; Fig. 3b). For the beta frequency band, again no correlation was evident between the chocolate sweetness scores and areal occupancy rate (n = 18; R2 = 0.12, F = 3.34, P = 0.09; Fig. 3c). These results suggest that when taste perception was disturbed by unmatched olfactory stimulation, EEG activities in the theta frequency band were enhanced.
To test possibility that the increases in theta band EEG activity during unmatched olfactory stimulation were caused by the effect of the garlic odorant stimulation itself, we investigated the influences of odor stimulation on EEG frequency without taste stimulation. EEG signals were collected from nine healthy participants. Profiles of mean occupancy rates obtained from the frequency analysis under conditions of garlic and chocolate olfactory stimulation are shown in Fig. 4a, b, respectively. In Fig. 4c, profiles of the two conditions are superimposed. Figure 4d shows the mean areal occupancy rate of the respective frequency bands under conditions of garlic and chocolate olfactory stimulation, respectively. To investigate whether patterns of EEG frequency bands between the two kinds of olfactory stimulation differed, we subtracted areal occupancy rates under the condition of garlic odor stimulation from those under the condition of chocolate odor stimulation and compared the results. Mean differences in theta, alpha and beta bands were − 0.92 ± 3.15, − 0.73 ± 3.46 and − 0.25 ± 2.60 (mean ± SD), respectively. One-way ANOVA performed using Origin8 software was used to evaluate the statistical significance of the areal difference values in the theta, alpha and beta frequency bands, respectively. No significant differences in areal difference values were apparent among these three frequency bands (F = 0.68; P = 0.52), demonstrating that increases in theta band EEG activity in the case of unmatched olfactory stimulation were not attributable to the effect of the garlic odorant stimulation itself.
Profiles of mean occupancy rates obtained from frequency analysis in the case of chocolate taste stimulation without odor stimulation are shown in Fig. 5a. To investigate additional effects of smell on taste stimulation, mean areal occupancy rates of respective frequency bands under the condition of chocolate taste stimulation with and without odorant stimulation were compared (Fig. 5b, c). Areal occupancy rates under the condition of garlic odor stimulation + chocolate taste stimulation were subtracted from those under the condition of chocolate-taste stimulation’. Mean differences in theta, alpha and beta bands were 4.29 ± 4.80, − 2.49 ± 3.13 and − 2.74 ± 5.13 (mean ± SD), respectively. One-way ANOVA (Origin8) was used to evaluate the statistical significance of areal difference values in all three of these frequency bands, revealing significant differences (F = 7.25; P = 0.003). Scheffe’s post hoc test was then used to detect significant differences between areal difference values in the respective frequency bands. These analyses revealed that differences in areal difference values between conditions of garlic odor stimulation + chocolate taste stimulation and chocolate taste stimulation were significantly greater in the theta frequency band than in other frequency bands (alpha: F = 5.2, P = 0.01; beta: F = 5.6, P = 0.01), demonstrating that an additional effect of garlic odor stimulation while tasting chocolate was enhancement of theta-band EEG activities. We then subtracted areal occupancy rates under the condition of chocolate-odor + chocolate taste stimulation conditions from those under the condition of chocolate taste stimulation. Mean differences in the theta, alpha and beta bands were − 0.97 ± 3.35, 0.34 ± 2.75 and 0.74 ± 3.88 (mean ± SD), respectively. One-way ANOVA (Origin8) was used to evaluate the significance of areal difference values in all three of these frequency bands, revealing that there were no significant differences in areal difference values among the three frequency bands (F = 0.64; P = 0.54). This result shows that we could not find any additional effects of chocolate odor stimulation under the condition of tasting chocolate.
Discussion
Humans receive external information through various sensory receptors. This information is integrated during processes that range from perception to cognition and involve emotion and memory [8, 26]. Cognitive processes require past experiences, and humans can recognize objects when there is a stored experience of that object. One object contains various modes of information, and the specific combination of contained information is extremely important for recognition. When one mode of information does not match with the recollection of an object, recognition of that object may be difficult. During the cognitive process, the brain tries to cross-check unmatched information against the object, which may induce different patterns of brain activity compared with cases in which all information matches with the object.
In the study reported here, we used chocolate as a tastant and chocolate paste and garlic paste as odorants. All participants rated chocolate sweetness high when the matched odor stimulation condition was applied (Fig. 1). Under this condition, feelings that the food in the mouth definitely represented chocolate were increased, supporting the notion that the smell helped in the recognition of chocolate. On the other hand, all participants rated chocolate sweetness as low when the unmatched odor stimulation condition was applied. In this case, feelings that the food in the mouth was chocolate decreased, indicating that smell can disturb the recognition of chocolate. Although taste thresholds should be measured for more precise evaluation of taste perception, we used sweetness scores to allow an easy understanding of subjective feelings of chocolate taste, including deliciousness.
In our comparison of occupancy rate profiles between conditions of unmatched odor stimulation and matched odor stimulation while tasting chocolate, we identified a small bulge in the frequency range 4–8 Hz that we recognized as the theta rhythm in the case of unmatched odor stimulation (Fig. 2a). Given the large areal difference values in the theta frequency band, compared with those in other frequency bands, the theta frequency band may play a role in information processing when humans perceive smells that do not match the corresponding foods (Fig. 2). As the possibility that the small bulge in the theta frequency band was a garlic odor-evoked response had to be considered, we investigated profiles of occupancy rates under the condition of only odor stimulation (Fig. 4). However, we could find neither a small bulge in the theta frequency band nor differences between garlic odor-evoked and chocolate odor-evoked responses in all frequency bands (Fig. 4d). This result led us to conclude that the small bulge in the theta frequency band under the condition of unmatched odor stimulation and chocolate tasting was unlikely to have been caused by only odor stimulation.
Figure 5a shows profiles of occupancy rate in the case of only chocolate taste stimulation without odorant stimulation. The profiles were similar to those under the condition of matched odor stimulation while tasting chocolate. Figure 5c shows no variance among differences between conditions of only chocolate tasting and matched odor stimulation while tasting chocolate in the respective frequency bands. We thus could not find additional effects of matched odor stimulation compared to taste stimulation. A possible cause of this result may be that the odor produced from chocolate itself in the oral cavity enters the nasal cavity and olfactory neurons are stimulated retronasally [22]. When retronasal odor stimulation is presented without orthnasal odor stimulation, retronasal olfaction might work more efficiently [27]. Figure 5b shows a comparison of areal occupancy rates between the conditions of chocolate tasting alone and unmatched odor stimulation while tasting chocolate in the respective frequency bands. The statistical results were similar to the results obtained from the comparison between conditions of unmatched and matched odor stimulation while tasting chocolate (see Results and Fig. 2d). The similarity might be due to the very few additional effects of chocolate odor stimulation on EEG activities to chocolate taste stimulation, as mentioned above.
In recent years, frontal midline theta rhythm (Fm theta) in humans has been reported to reflect mental concentration as well as meditative state [17, 19, 28,29,30]. Human studies using EEG and magnetoencephalogram analyses suggest that the origin of Fm theta activities when executing tasks or making decisions that require mental concentration or a meditative state are interactions between the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) [30,31,32]. Indeed, the ACC together with the orbitofrontal cortex are regarded as areas where taste and olfactory information converge [33]. Another candidate for sources of Fm theta activities is the hippocampus. Recent studies suggest that oscillatory synchrony between the hippocampus and mPFC play a crucial role in not only memory integration, but also the retrieval of memories [34,35,36]. The hippocampus and mPFC are able to retrieve, exchange, integrate and re-encode multiple memories, as well as contribute to memory-based decision-making [36, 37]. An oscillatory coupling exists between the hippocampus and mPFC, and theta oscillation is required when the association memory is transferred from the hippocampus to the mPFC [38,39,40].
The results of our study show that the theta band appeared while the participants were perceiving smells that did not match the food they were tasting. In addition, under this condition, the subjective feeling of sweetness decreased, and the participants tended to be unable to discern what the food was. The feeling of perturbance might induce concentration, resulting in the generation of the theta rhythm activity. Indeed, error-related theta waves have been observed in the mPFC [41]. Although we cannot address sources of the theta rhythm, our results suggest that theta-band brain activities emerge during the cross-checking of unmatched information.
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Acknowledgements
We wish to thank Dr. T. Akamatsu, T. Hasegawa, C. Yao, H. Y. Miyachi; Kanayama for experimental assistance. This study was partially supported by grants from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research C 22590966), and was partially supported by the Research Clusters Program of Tokushima University.
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HY contributed to the experimental design of the research, and drafted the manuscript. SM and HY performed experiments, and analyzed and interpreted the data.
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All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.
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Maeda, S., Yoshimura, H. Enhancement of electroencephalogram activity in the theta-band range during unmatched olfactory-taste stimulation. J Physiol Sci 69, 613–621 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12576-019-00674-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12576-019-00674-9