Don Katz, an associate professor of psychology at Brandeis University in the US, has been investigating the interconnection of smell and taste in rats.
In 2009, he showed that when rats lose their ability to taste, it alters their sense of smell. Two years later, he published a paper suggesting that rats depend on smell as much as taste to determine what food they like.
In a new study published in the journal Current Biology, Katz showed what happened when a rat's sense of taste is shut down. Using an optical probe, he turned off the brain cells in the animal's primary olfactory cortex that process taste signals from the mouth.
These findings about the interdependence of taste and smell have led Katz to speculate that they are one single sense. He dubbed it the "chemosensory system".
"How things taste depends on a lot of other factors than what's on the tongue. We think that taste and smell are part of one large system with two doors, the mouth and the nose," Katz said.
Other researchers have shown that sound, touch, and sight are also inextricably connected.
Katz likened the brain to a computer fed an immense amount of data so it can generate a single, simplified finding. For the programme to run, information must be gathered through all the senses.
But we don't realise this. We are only aware of programme's final result, which is the illusion that only one sense is responsible for what we experience, according to Katz.
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