tongue – Techdirt (original) (raw)
Stories filed under: "tongue"
DailyDirt: This Tastes Funny… Here Try It
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
There’s no accounting for taste — unless of course you have to quantify it with sensory panels and professional tasters. It’s not quite an exact science which is sorta why you can never get 4 out of 5 dentists to agree on anything, but researchers are still trying their best to learn about how we perceive different tastes. If you’re a serious foodie or just curious, check out some of these links on flavors and how we sense them.
- One hypothesis for why people have bitter receptors is that early humans needed to avoid poisonous plants, but that explanation hasn’t been supported by much evidence. It’s a mystery why we can perceive bitter as a taste because the ability doesn’t seem to correlate at all with diet and a hunter-gatherer lifestyle. [url]
- Red pandas apparently like the taste of aspartame (and other artificial sweeteners), and these bears are the first non-primate mammals known to have such a preference. The researchers who made this discovery placed a sweet solution and a control of plain water in front of animals in a zoo for a day, and a preference was observed if the animals drank more of the sweet solution rather than plain water. Recently, giant pandas were also found to like sugar, even though they typically eat mostly bamboo. [url]
- Maybe you remember learning about a tongue map where sweet receptors are on the tip of your tongue and bitter receptors are on the back? Sorry, but researchers say that map is wrong. The ability to taste bitter, sour, sweet, salty and umami can be found all over the tongue, in the same areas. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post via StumbleUpon.
Filed Under: artificial sweeteners, aspartame, bitter, flavors, food, pandas, sweet, taste, tongue
DailyDirt: Advances In Wheelchair Technology
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
There are nearly 6 million people in the US living with some form of paralysis. Despite some controversy, the FDR memorial has a statue of the president sitting in a wheelchair. Wheelchairs have been around for over a hundred years, but technology could improve how they work. Here are just a few examples.
- The Tongue Drive System allows users to control their wheelchairs via tongue movements. This prototype requires a “clinical” tongue piercing and a dental retainer, so maybe a camera system would be a nice improvement. [url]
- Tek RMD is a robotic mobilization device that might replace a wheelchair and give paraplegics the ability to move around upright. It’s not quite a powered exoskeleton, and it can’t do stairs, but it’s an interesting robotic alternative to a wheelchair (even though it costs a lot more). [url]
- A wheelchair from Kyoto University called the Permoveh has omnidirectional wheels, so it can move more freely and turn on a dime. The prototype has a top speed of 3.7 mph and costs over $36,000, but future models are expected to be cheaper. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post via StumbleUpon.
Filed Under: omnidirectional wheels, paralysis, prototypes, tongue, ui, wheelchairs
DailyDirt: Accounting For Taste
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Thanks to the receptors in our taste buds, eating is one of life’s greatest pleasures. Of the five different taste sensations, sweetness is probably the most pleasing. Starting from infancy, our bodies are already programmed to seek out sugar because it provides the energy to keep us going. There is also some indication that babies can be influenced to like salt if they are exposed to salty foods early on. As part of an evolutionary survival mechanism, our bodies are programmed to avoid eating bitter tasting things because many toxic compounds taste bitter. People like to eat sour-tasting foods, like citrus fruits or pickles, but from an evolutionary perspective, sourness is generally a warning for food spoilage. Finally, umami is supposed to be a “savory” taste, which is produced when our taste buds detect glutamate, the salt of the amino acid glutamic acid. Foods that naturally have an umami taste include cheese and tomatoes, so it’s no wonder that pizza tastes so good! Here are a few more tasty tidbits.
- Many animals, including cats and dolphins, can’t taste sweet things. It turns out that a large number of carnivores can’t taste sugars because they have non-working versions of the genes responsible for making sugar receptors on the tongue. [url]
- Researchers are working on developing artificial tongues that can mimic the human taste response to various flavors. However, to fully reproduce the experience of taste requires the development of an artifical nose, because a large part of “taste” is actually due to smell. [url]
- The elusive “salt receptor” is unlike the receptors for all the other tastes, and figuring it out is complicated by the fact that sodium is essential for life but can kill you at high enough doses. (Apparently, it takes only a few mouthfuls of salt water from the Dead Sea to kill a person.) Researchers now believe that there are two receptors or mechanisms involved in tasting salt — one that makes salt desirable and another (the elusive one) that makes it undesirable at high concentrations. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post.
Filed Under: carnivores, receptors, salty, senses, sweet, taste, tongue
DailyDirt: You Can't Be In Two Places At Once… Yet.
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
The flying car is one of those futuristic technologies that will probably always remain in the future. On the other hand, there are some science fiction devices like telepresence robots that are actually becoming affordable — and maybe even practical. Here are some examples that could be taking your place (with your permission, of course).
- The Vgo telepresence platform has gotten some publicity for letting a “bubble boy” student go to high school using a remote-controlled robot. A lot of people would probably have enjoyed high school more if they didn’t actually attend in person… [url]
- Anybots has created another telepresence robot that could let more folks “work from home” using a friendly bot. But if everyone uses one of these at work, why have an office? [url]
- A hovering balloon could become a telepresence robot, too. And a floating balloon robot has the advantage of being able to float up stairs and being able to navigate challenging terrains quietly. [url]
- There may be a largely untapped industry for remote-controlled disembodied body parts. A robot tongue probably isn’t the killer app for this market, though. [url]
- To discover more interesting tech-related content, check out what’s currently floating around the StumbleUpon universe. [url]
By the way, StumbleUpon can recommend some good Techdirt articles, too.
Filed Under: robots, telepresence, tongue
Companies: anybots, vgo