This paper explores some connections between flavour perception, emotion, and temporal experience. Focussing on the question, If you like that taste of X and I do not, are we tasting the same thing X?, I will approach it by looking at some differences between how experts and nonexperts ‘taste’. I will eventually answer that if by ‘the same thing’ we mean the overall flavour profile of a complex sensory object, then the answer must be negative. I will argue that there is indeed a relatively trivial sense in which one tastes the same thing, but that this is not an experience of flavour. In the process I will reject the view that there are real emergent flavour properties
According to cognitive psychology, virtually every sensory system influences the way in which flavou...
For centuries, if not millennia, people have associated the basic tastes (e.g., sweet, bitter, salty...
Sensory perceptions evolve over time due to mastication and oral structural breakdown of food. Singl...
Recently, psychologists and neuroscientists have provided a great deal of evidence showing that perc...
Our understanding of the psychology of food choice and eating has gaps when it comes to the understa...
We present rich descriptions of taste experience through an analysis of the diachronic and synchroni...
We present rich descriptions of taste experience through an analysis of the diachronic and synchroni...
Flavour is arguably the most fascinating aspect of eating and drinking. It utilises a complex variet...
We review the evidence suggesting that the bistable/multistable percepts that exist in the so-called...
Where does liking or disliking come from while eating a product? Is it originated from the first sen...
The analogy between gustatory taste and critical or aesthetic taste plays a recurring role in the hi...
Following on from ecological theories of perception, such as the one proposed by [Gibson, J. J. (196...
Here, we investigate whether the expectation that a drink tastes consistent across mouthfuls influen...
In the last decade, Temporal Dominance of Sensations (TDS) has been developed to describe the evolut...
The Flavour of food is a multimodal perception that involves at least the chemical senses. Therefore...
According to cognitive psychology, virtually every sensory system influences the way in which flavou...
For centuries, if not millennia, people have associated the basic tastes (e.g., sweet, bitter, salty...
Sensory perceptions evolve over time due to mastication and oral structural breakdown of food. Singl...
Recently, psychologists and neuroscientists have provided a great deal of evidence showing that perc...
Our understanding of the psychology of food choice and eating has gaps when it comes to the understa...
We present rich descriptions of taste experience through an analysis of the diachronic and synchroni...
We present rich descriptions of taste experience through an analysis of the diachronic and synchroni...
Flavour is arguably the most fascinating aspect of eating and drinking. It utilises a complex variet...
We review the evidence suggesting that the bistable/multistable percepts that exist in the so-called...
Where does liking or disliking come from while eating a product? Is it originated from the first sen...
The analogy between gustatory taste and critical or aesthetic taste plays a recurring role in the hi...
Following on from ecological theories of perception, such as the one proposed by [Gibson, J. J. (196...
Here, we investigate whether the expectation that a drink tastes consistent across mouthfuls influen...
In the last decade, Temporal Dominance of Sensations (TDS) has been developed to describe the evolut...
The Flavour of food is a multimodal perception that involves at least the chemical senses. Therefore...
According to cognitive psychology, virtually every sensory system influences the way in which flavou...
For centuries, if not millennia, people have associated the basic tastes (e.g., sweet, bitter, salty...
Sensory perceptions evolve over time due to mastication and oral structural breakdown of food. Singl...