| Literature DB >> 35808472 |
Asif Ullah1, Yifan Liu1, You Wang1, Han Gao1, Hengyang Wang1, Jin Zhang2, Guang Li1.
Abstract
Taste is a key sense that helps identify different food types and most of this work was carried out on primary tastes rather than generating different flavors. In this work, we proposed a plan to create other flavors rather than primary tastes, adjusted the electrical (40-180 µA) and thermal stimulation (20-38 °C and 38-20 °C), and revealed the digital coding for multi-flavors. Our results showed that different combinations of digital coding could generate different flavors and that tastes related to different stimuli are easy to develop. The novelty of this work is to design other types of flavors and primary tastes. The experimental results demonstrated that the novel method proposed for digital taste coding could realize primary tastes (sweet, sour, salty, spicy, and mint) and mixed flavors. Furthermore, some innovative sensations have been realized, which are sprite, soda water, sweet-sour, salty-sweet, and salty-mint sensations. We presume that this innovation could digitally enhance various flavors.Entities:
Keywords: E-taste; digital flavors; human-computer interface; taste stimulation; virtual reality
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35808472 PMCID: PMC9269741 DOI: 10.3390/s22134976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1Digital taste system (a) implementation and (b) system architecture.
Figure 2Digital taste generating system (a) control system (b) tongue interface.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of e-taste.
Taste sensations scale.
| 0 | 1 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| −3 | −2 | −1 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| Extreme dislike | Moderate dislike | Slight dislike | No sensation | Slight sensation | Moderate sensation | Extreme sensation |
The magnitude of taste sensations.
| Taste Sensations | Magnitude/Range of Sensation |
|---|---|
| Sweet | 25–35 °C and 35–25 °C |
| Sour | 60–180 µA or 20–30 °C |
| Salty | 40–70 µA |
| Sprite/soda water | 60–180 µA and 30–20 °C |
| Bitter | 60–140 µA |
| Mint | Below 25 °C |
| Spicy | Above 33 °C |
| Sweet-sour | 60–180 µA and 25–35 °C and 35–25 °C |
| Salty-sweet | 40–70 µA and 25–35 °C and 35–25 °C |
| Salty-mint | 40–70 µA and below 25 °C |
Figure 4Thermal stimulation (a) heating up to 38 °C (b) cooling down up to 30 °C.
Figure 5Different taste sensations and flavors versus mean value of sensation (%).
The mean value of taste sensations and standard error of the mean of 23 participants.
| Taste Sensations | Mean Value ± Standard Error of the Mean |
|---|---|
| Sweet | 0.463 ± 0.1 |
| Sour | 0.857± 0.07 |
| Salty | 0.855 ± 0.07 |
| Bitter | 0.865 ± 0.07 |
| Sprite | 0.852 ± 0.07 |
| Mint | 0.411 ± 0.1 |
| Spicy | 0.755 ± 0.08 |
| Sweet-sour | 0.285 ± 0.09 |
| Salty-sweet | 0.297 ± 0.09 |
| Salty-mint | 0.415 ± 0.1 |
| Soda water | 0.714 ± 0.09 |
Figure 6Mean value of taste sensations of 3 participants with highly sensitive taste buds.
Single-factor ANOVA taste.
| Source of Variation (SV) | Sum of Squares (SS) | Degree of Freedom (df) | Mean Square (MS) | Fstatistics | Fcrit | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Between groups | 13.17 | 10 | 1.32 | 7.2 | 6.2 × 10−10 | 1.87 |
| Within groups | 44.28 | 242 | 0.18 | |||
| Total | 57.45 | 252 |
Figure 7The average percentage of taste sensations of 23 participants with repeated experiments. Error bar depicts 90–98% CI. All data are expressed as mean ± SD ⁎⁎ p ≤ 0.05.
Related works versus e-taste devices.
| Title of the Research Paper | Senses Generated | Revised Sensation | Excitation Constraints | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metallic Taste from Electrical and Chemical Stimulation |
Metallic-based taste, electrical stimuli, and divalent salt provisions with ferrous sulfate | Nil | Nil | [ |
| Thermal stimulation of taste |
Demonstrate that warming and cooling small tongue areas can produce taste sensations | Nil |
Heating (20–35 °C) Cooling (≤20 °C) Rate ±1.5 °C s−1 | [ |
| Thermal Taste Actuation Technology |
Swiftly warming the tongue has sweet and fatty sensations, whereas cooling produces a minty sensation and pleasantness. | Significant improvements in the sweetness of sucrose-based sweet solutions were achieved. |
Heating (25–40 °C) Cooling (25–10 °C) Heating rate (1.5 °C s−1, 1 °C s−1, 0.66 °C s−1) Cooling rate (0.5 °C s−1) | [ |
| Digital taste: electronic stimulation of taste sensations |
Generated basic taste sensations (sweet, sour, bitter, and salty) on the tongue’s surface. | Nil |
Heating (20–35 °C) Cooling (≤20 °C) Heating rate (0.33 °C s−1) Cooling rate (0.28 °C s−1) | [ |
| Digital Taste and Smell Communication |
Cooling produced sourness | Nil | Cooling (35–20 °C) | [ |
| Virtual sweet: Simulating sweet sensation using thermal stimulation on the tip of the tongue |
Produced Sweetness | Nil | Heating to Cooling (20–35 °C and 35–20 °C) | [ |
| E-taste: Taste sensations and flavors based on tongue’s electrical and thermal stimulation |
Generate significant effect for sweet, sour, bitter, salty, mint, and spicy sensations Generate different flavors (Sprite, Soda water, sweet-sour, salty-sweet, and salty-mint) | Generate various types of flavors by combining different taste sensations |
Thermal stimulation: Heating (20 °C – ≥38 °C) Cooling (38 °C – ≤20 °C) Electric stimulation: (40–180 µA)-Hybrid stimulation includes both electrical and thermal stimulation Heating rate (0.65 °C s−1) Cooling rate (0.5 °C s−1) Current rate: (10 µAs−1) | Current work |