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TASTE AND SMELL: A UNIFYING CHEMOSENSORY THEORY

Journal

QUARTERLY REVIEW OF BIOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 2, Pages 69-94

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/720097

Keywords

chemical senses; receptors; ligands; chemosensory systems; evolution of chemosensation; chemical ecology

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Smell is traditionally considered a distance sense while taste is perceived as based on direct contact, but evidence has emerged that challenges this dichotomy, especially in non-human species. Conflicting data has been interpreted to conform to the traditional separation. Therefore, we propose unifying all chemosensory modalities into a single sense, developing a comprehensive perspective on chemical communication.
Since antiquity, the sense of smell (olfaction) is considered as a distance sense, just like sight and hearing. Conversely, the sense of taste (gustation) is thought to operate by direct contact, similarly to touch. With the progress of natural sciences, information at molecular, anatomical, and neurobiological levels has also contributed to the taste-smell dichotomy, but much evidence inconsistent with a sharp differentiation of these two senses has emerged, especially when considering species other than humans. In spite of this, conflicting information has been interpreted so that it could conform to the traditional differentiation. As a result, a confirmation bias is currently affecting scientific research on chemosensory systems and is also hindering the development of a satisfactory narrative of the evolution of chemical communication across taxa. From this perspective, the chemosensory dichotomy loses its validity and usefulness. We thus propose the unification of all chemosensory modalities into a single sense, moving toward a synthetic, complex, and interconnected perspective on the gradual processes by which a vast variety of chemicals have become signals that are crucially important to communication among and within cells, organs, and organisms in a wide variety of environmental conditions.

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