The study, by researchers from the Stony Brook University in the US, may change the way neuroscientists think about the role of the gustatory cortex - the part of the brain responsible for the perception of taste.
"We found that the gustatory cortex receives information from all the senses, not just taste," said Alfredo Fontanini, from Stony Brook University in the US.
"Not all the non-gustatory stimuli are equally effective in activating the gustatory cortex, those that can easily be linked to taste tend to recruit more neurons. Olfaction is particularly effective," said Fontanini.
The study appears in the journal eLife.
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