Sensory Perception in Eating
How the Senses Process Food Experience
Research in sensory neuroscience demonstrates that eating is a multisensory experience. Taste, smell, texture, visual appearance, and even sound contribute to the perceptual experience of food consumption.
The brain integrates signals from multiple sensory pathways simultaneously. The olfactory system—responsible for smell—plays a particularly significant role, accounting for much of what humans interpret as "taste." Visual cues about food color, shape, and presentation influence expectation and perception.
When sensory attention is directed toward these elements during eating, different neural patterns emerge compared to eating without focused attention. The brain's sensory cortex shows increased activation when eating is attended to consciously.
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