| Literature DB >> 19656505 |
Katherine E Piwnica-Worms1, Rohani Omar, Julia C Hailstone, Jason D Warren.
Abstract
The cognitive mechanisms for the analysis of flavour information remain poorly understood. Patients with semantic dementia (SD) could potentially provide a window on these mechanisms; however, while abnormal eating behaviour and altered food preferences are common in SD, flavour processing has been little studied in this disorder. Here we undertook a detailed investigation of flavour processing in three patients at different stages of SD. One patient with a clinical syndrome of logopenic aphasia (LPA) was studied as a disease control, and six healthy control subjects also participated. Olfaction was assessed using the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test and processing of flavours was assessed using a novel battery to assess flavour perception, flavour identification, and congruence and affective valence of flavour combinations. Patients with SD performed equivalently to healthy controls on the perceptual subtest, while their ability to identify flavours or to determine congruence of flavour combinations was impaired. Classification of flavours according to affective valence was comparable to healthy controls. In contrast, the patient with LPA exhibited a perceptual deficit with relatively preserved identification of flavours, but impaired ability to determine flavour congruence, which did not benefit from affective valence. Olfactory and flavour identification performance was correlated in both patients and controls. We propose that SD produces a true deficit of flavour knowledge (an associative agnosia), while other peri-Sylvian pathologies may lead to deficient flavour perception. Our findings are consistent with emerging evidence from healthy subjects for a cortical hierarchy for processing flavour information, instantiated in a brain network that includes the insula, anterior temporal lobes and orbitofrontal cortex. The findings suggest a potential mechanism for the development of food fads and other abnormal eating behaviours. Copyright (c) 2009 Elsevier Srl. All rights reserved.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19656505 PMCID: PMC2865644 DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2009.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cortex ISSN: 0010-9452 Impact factor: 4.027
Summary of patient characteristics, background neuropsychology and MR findings.
| Patient | Age/gender | Clinical diagnosis | Duration of clinical illness | Abnormal eating behaviour | Background neuropsychology | Brain MRI findings | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raven's Matrices | Camden Memory | Rep | Picture naming | Synonyms (concrete) | Famous faces | Object decision | ||||||||||||
| raw/12 | % ile | raw/30 | % ile | raw/20 | % ile | raw/25 | % ile | raw/12 | % ile | raw/20 | % ile | |||||||
| 1 | 55 M | SD | 4 y | – | 8 | 50–75 | 30 | 50–100 | 30 | 5 | <5 | 16 | 5–10 | 9 | 25 | 20 | 90–100 | Antero-inferior L > R TL atrophy |
| 2 | 59 M | SD | 7 y | Preference for foods (pineapple, licorice) previously disliked | 8 | 75–90 | 29 | 25–50 | 30 | 0 | <5 | 14 | 1–5 | 0 | <5 | 15 | 10–20 | Antero-inferior L > R TL atrophy, inferior FL atrophy |
| 3 | 63 F | SD | 7 y | – | 5 | 50 | 14 | <1 | 30 | 0 | <5 | 15 | 5 | 2 | <5 | 8 | <1 | Antero-inferior L > R TL atrophy, inferior FL atrophy |
| 4 | 56 M | LPA | 3 y | Sweet tooth, red wine ‘bitter’, honey unpleasant | 1 | <5 | 24 | <1 | 30 | 12 | <5 | 19 | 25 | 10 | 50 | 18 | 50–75 | L > R TL, peri-Sylvian atrophy |
Key: F, female; FL, frontal lobe; L, left; M, male; R, right; Rep, polysyllabic word repetition.
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Polysyllabic word repetition and easy picture naming tests; percentiles calculated from previous healthy control sample (n = 42; details available from the authors).
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Structure of the flavour battery (first part).
| Pair No. | Flavour pair | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jelly bean 1 | Flavour identification: word/picture match | ||||||
| Close foil | Distant foil | Target | |||||
| 1 | Pickle | S | – | Pepper | Mango | Pickle | |
| 2 | Coconut | S | – | Vanilla | Pepper | Coconut | |
| 3 | Peppermint | S | – | Chocolate | Pear | Peppermint | |
| 4 | Chocolate | S | – | Coffee | Watermelon | Chocolate | |
| 5 | Licorice | S | – | Chocolate | Lemon | Licorice | |
| 6 | Chocolate | D | C | Chocolate | Licorice | Peanut butter | |
| 7 | Chocolate | D | C | Chocolate | Watermelon | Coffee | |
| 8 | Vanilla | D | C | Black currant | Pickle | Strawberry | |
| 9 | Vanilla | D | C | Strawberry | Pepper | Raspberry | |
| 10 | Cinnamon | D | C | Pear | Licorice | Apple | |
| 11 | Orange | D | C | Orange | Toffee | Lemon | |
| 12 | Strawberry | D | C | Strawberry | Licorice | Black currant | |
| 13 | Watermelon | D | C | Watermelon | Chocolate | Mango | |
| 14 | Mango | D | C | Mango | Peanut butter | Orange | |
| 15 | Apple | D | C | Apple | Peppermint | Pear | |
| 16 | Coffee | D | IC | Mango | Peanut butter | Watermelon | |
| 17 | Watermelon | D | IC | Apple | Strawberry | Cinnamon | |
| 18 | Strawberry | D | IC | Pickle | Coffee | Pepper | |
| 19 | Lemon | D | IC | Vanilla | Pickle | Toffee | |
| 20 | Pickle | D | IC | Strawberry | Watermelon | Vanilla | |
| 21 | Pear | D | IC | – | – | – | |
| 22 | Mango | D | IC | – | – | – | |
| 23 | Pepper | D | IC | – | – | – | |
| 24 | Licorice | D | IC | – | – | – | |
| 25 | Peanut butter | D | IC | – | – | – | |
Key: C, congruent (intended classification); D, different; IC, incongruent (intended classification); S, same. Identification task based on jelly bean 2 in each pair (shown in bold).
Pairs presented in randomised order.
Screen positions of target and foils randomised.
Summary of subject performance on olfactory and flavour tests.
| Subject age, gender | Olfactory (UPSIT) | Flavours | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | Part 2 | |||||
| Patients | Raw/40 | %ile | Task 1: Perception (A-prime) | Task 2: Flavour combination congruence | Task 3: Flavour identification | Flavour combination pleasantness |
| 1 55 M | 30 | >20 | .97 | .56 | .75 | .76 |
| 2 59 M | 17 | <5 | .9 | .47 | .45 | .81 |
| 3 63F | 15 | <5 | .91 | .33 | .4 | N/A |
| 4 56 M | 19 | <5 | .73 (.79) | .59 | .7 | .53 |
| Healthy controls | ||||||
| 1 67 M | 34 | >50 | 1 | .85 | .9 | .74 |
| 2 52 M | 28 | >10 | .95 | .75 | .75 | .66 |
| 3 62F | 31 | >15 | .93 | .89 | .9 | .73 |
| 4 60 M | 35 | >50 | 1 | .9 | .9 | .81 |
| 5 65 M | 33 | >40 | .99 | .74 | .85 | .73 |
| 6 63F | 30 | >10 | .93 | .84 | .85 | .76 |
Presented in cross-modal simultaneous word–picture matching format.
Simultaneous presentation of jelly beans in each pair.
Chance performance = .33.
Chance performance = .5.
See text for explanation.