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Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health

How Does the Brain Interpret Aromas as Taste? A Recent Study Provides a Clearer Insight

16 Oct 2025

Description

New research from the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that your brain interprets certain aromas as taste, activating the same regions as sugar Retronasal smell โ€” odor molecules rising from your mouth during eating โ€” creates flavor, while orthonasal smell (sniffing) detects outside odors Functional MRI scans revealed that the insula, the brain's taste cortex, responds to sweet-associated aromas like vanilla or strawberry as if sugar were present Everyday experiences, such as food tasting bland during a cold, highlight the difference between taste vs. flavor and the role of retronasal airflow Sweet-linked aromas can help reduce added sugar in foods by enhancing perceived sweetness, though they do not change calorie or glucose content

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