Human A&P - Sense of Taste
The mechanism of tasting probably involves:
a combination of chemicals binding specific receptors on taste hair surfaces, altering membrane polarization, and thereby generating sensory impulses on nearby nerve fibers.
Bitter receptors are stimulated by:
a variety of chemicals
Taste receptors, like olfactory receptors, undergo:
adaptation
A taste pore is:
an opening in a taste bud
Responsiveness to a sour stimulus is greatest:
at the margins of the tongue
Sweet receptors are usually stimulated by:
carbohydrates
Salt receptors are stimulated by:
ionized inorganic salts
Taste cells are:
modified epithelial cells that function as receptors.
Taste buds are located:
on papillae of the tongue
Spicy foods activate:
pain receptors
Acids stimulate:
sour receptors
Taste buds are:
special organs of taste
The five primary taste sensations are:
sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami.
Responsiveness to a sweet stimulus peaks at:
the tip of the tongue
Papillae of the tongue are:
tiny elevations
Taste hairs are:
tiny projections from the surface of taste cells.
Receptors that are responsive to salt are:
widely distributed