Trying to detect taste in a tasteless solution: modulation of early gustatory cortex by attention to taste

MG Veldhuizen, G Bender, RT Constable… - Chemical …, 2007 - academic.oup.com
Chemical Senses, 2007academic.oup.com
Selective attention is thought to be associated with enhanced processing in modality-
specific cortex. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate brain response
during a taste detection task. We demonstrate that trying to detect the presence of taste in a
tasteless solution results in enhanced activity in insula and overlying operculum. The same
task does not recruit orbitofrontal cortex (OFC). Instead, the OFC responds preferentially
during receipt of an unpredicted taste stimulus. These findings demonstrate functional …
Abstract
Selective attention is thought to be associated with enhanced processing in modality-specific cortex. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate brain response during a taste detection task. We demonstrate that trying to detect the presence of taste in a tasteless solution results in enhanced activity in insula and overlying operculum. The same task does not recruit orbitofrontal cortex (OFC). Instead, the OFC responds preferentially during receipt of an unpredicted taste stimulus. These findings demonstrate functional specialization of taste cortex in which the insula and the overlying operculum are recruited during taste detection and selective attention to taste, and the OFC is recruited during receipt of an unpredicted taste stimulus.
Oxford University Press