You
not only pick up aromas through your nose, but also through your mouth while
you chew your food. Some people simply can smell better than others and those
may enjoy an enhanced flavor of foods.Unfortunately, for some, this ability decreases with age, report Tyler Flaherty
and Juyun Lim of Oregon State University in the U.S. in Springer's journal
Chemosensory Perception. 
The two scientists studied how people experience odors via their mouths, and
whether age or gender has an influence on it. This so-called retronasal smell
comes into play when food is chewed and volatile molecules are released in the
process.
These then drift through the mouth to the back of the nose where the odor is
detected.The participants in the study were 102 non-smoking healthy people between the ages of 18 and 72 years old. They rated how intensely they pick up on two tastes (sweet and salty) and four odors (strawberry, vanilla, chicken and soy sauce) put to them. Participants were also exposed to these in combinations that go well together, such as sweet and vanilla, or salty and chicken.
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