Against gustotopic representation in the human brain: There is no Cartesian Restaurant

2021 
The insular cortex is still one of the least understood cortical regions in the human brain. This review will highlight research on taste quality representation within the human insular cortex. Much of the controversy surrounding this topic is based in the ongoing debate over different theories of peripheral taste coding. When translated to the study of gustatory cortex, this has generated a distinct set of theoretical models, namely the topographic (or ‘gustotopic’) and population coding models of taste organization. Recent investigations into this topic have employed high-resolution functional neuroimaging methods and multivariate analytic approaches to examine taste quality coding in the human brain. Collectively, these recent studies do not support the topographic model of taste quality representation, but rather one where taste quality is represented by distributed patterns of activation within gustatory regions of the insula.
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