Essentials: The Biology of Taste Perception & Sugar Craving | Dr. Charles Zuker - podcast episode cover

Essentials: The Biology of Taste Perception & Sugar Craving | Dr. Charles Zuker

Mar 05, 202635 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Summary

Dr. Charles Zuker delves into the fascinating biology of taste perception, explaining how chemical signals on the tongue are transformed into distinct taste experiences in the brain. The discussion covers the five basic tastes reweet, sour, bitter, salty, and umami and their evolutionary significance in guiding dietary needs. Crucially, the episode highlights the powerful and often unconscious influence of the gut-brain axis on food preferences, particularly in driving sugar cravings, and explores why artificial sweeteners fail to curb this deep-seated desire. This underscores the brain's central role as the "conductor" of our metabolism and food choices.

Episode description

In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, my guest is Dr. Charles Zuker, PhD, a professor of biochemistry, molecular biophysics and neuroscience at Columbia University and an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI).

We explore taste perception and how the brain transforms chemical signals from food into distinct taste experiences. We discuss how these taste signals shape both conscious choices and unconscious behavior, as well as how food preferences can change over time. Additionally, we discuss gut–brain signaling and explain why sugar is especially powerful at driving cravings.

Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com.

Thank you to our sponsors

AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman

LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman

Function: https://functionhealth.com/huberman

Timestamps

(00:00:00) Charles Zuker

(00:00:20) Senses & Perception

(00:02:29) Taste, 5 Taste Qualities & Dietary Needs

(00:05:49) Taste vs Flavor

(00:07:05) Sponsor: AG1

(00:07:56) Taste Buds; Bitter

(00:09:45) Sweet vs Bitter, Sensory Perception from Tongue to Brain

(00:12:47) Taste Plasticity & Changing Food Preferences

(00:14:13) Taste Modulation; Salt

(00:17:08) Sponsor: LMNT

(00:18:41) Gut-Brain Signaling

(00:23:14) Sugar Appetite & Gut-Brain Axis

(00:27:42) Sponsor: Function

(00:29:21) Artificial Sweeteners, Sugar Cravings

(00:30:37) Taste & Essential Nutrients; Highly Processed Foods; Brain & Food Choices

(00:34:11) Acknowledgements

Disclaimer & Disclosures

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Charles Zuker

Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent and actionable science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance. I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. And now for my discussion with Dr. Charles Zucker.

Senses & Perception

Charles, thank you so much for joining me today. My pleasure. I want to ask you about many things related to taste and gustatory perception, but maybe to start off, and because you've worked on a number of different topics in neuroscience, not just taste. How should the world and people think about perception, how it's different from sensation, and What leads to our experience of life in terms of vision, hearing, taste, etc.? The world is made of real things. You know, this here is a glass.

And this is a cord, and this is a microphone. But the brain is only made of neurons that only understand electrical signals. So how do you transform that reality into nothing that electrical signals that now need to represent the world? And that process is we can is what we can operationally define as perception. In the senses let's say olfactory, odor, taste, vision, you know, we can very straightforwardly separate detection from perception.

Detection is what happens when you take a sugar molecule, you put it in your tongue, and then a set of specific cells now sense that sugar molecule. That's detection. You haven't perceived anything yet. That is just yourselves in your tongue interacting with this chemical. But now that cell gets activated and sends a signal to the brain. And now detection gets transformed into perception.

And he's trying to understand how that happens that's been the The maniacal drive of my entire career in neuroscience. How does the brain ultimately transform detection into perception so that it can guide actions and behaviors? So if I want to begin to explore all of these things that the brain does.

Taste, 5 Taste Qualities & Dietary Needs

I felt I have to choose a sensory system that affords some degree of simplicity. in the way that the input Output relationships are put together, and in a way that still can be used to ask every one of these problems that the brain has to ultimately compute, encode, and decode. And what was remarkable about the taste system at the time that I began working on this. is that nothing was known about the molecular basis of Tate.

You know, we knew that we could taste what has been usually defined as the big the five basic taste qualities. Sour, bitter, salty, and umami. Umami is a Japanese word that means yummy, delicious. And that's the in nearly every animal species the taste of amino acid. and in humans is mostly associated with the taste of MSG, monosodium glutamate, one amino acid in particular. And so the beautiful thing of the system is that the lines of input are limited to five.

And each of them has a predetermined meaning. You're born with that specific valence value for each taste. Umami and low salt are attractive taste qualities. They evoke appetitive responses. I want to consume them. And bitter and sour are innately predetermined to be averse. In the case of bitter, it's very easy to actually look at, see them happening in animals, because the first thing you do is you stop leaking, then you put uh unhappy face.

then you squint your eyes, and then you start gogging. And that entire thing happens by the activation of a bitter molecule in a bitter sensing cell in your tongue. It's incredible. It's r it's i it's it's again the magic of the brain, you know how how it it's able to encode and decode these extraordinary actions and behaviors in response of nothing but a simple, very s you know uh unique. sensory stimuli. This palette of five basic tastes accommodates all the dietary needs of the organism.

Sweet to ensure that we get the right amount of energy. Umami to ensure that we get proteins, another essential nutrient. Salt, the three appetitive ones to ensure that we maintain our electrolyte balance. Bitter to prevent the ingestion of toxic, nauseous chemicals. Nearly all bitter tasting, you know, things out in the wild are bad for you. And sour, most likely to prevent ingestion of spoil Fermented food. And that's it, that is the palette that we deal with.

Taste vs Flavor

Now of course there's a difference between basic taste and flavor. Flavor is the whole experience. Flavor is the combination of multiple tastes coming together. Together with smell, with texture, with temperature. With the look of it, that gives you what you and I would call the false sensory experience. But we scientists. need to reduce the the problem into its basic elements so we can begin to break it apart before we put it back together. So when we think about the sense of taste.

And we try to figure out how these lines of information go from your tongue to your brain and how they signal and how they get integrated and how they trigger all these different behaviors, we look at them as individual qualities. So we give the animals sweet or we give them a bitter or we give them sour. We avoid mixing. think of it as lines of information just separate lines like the keys of a piano

Sweet, sour, beat a soltumami, you play the key and you activate a one chord. And that one chord, in the case of a piano, leads to a note, you know, a tune. And in the case of taste leads to an action and a behavior.

Sponsor: AG1

If you're a regular listener of the Huberman Lab podcast, you've no doubt heard me talk about the vitamin Mineral Probiotic Drink AG1. And if you've been on the fence about it, now's an awesome time to give it a try. For the next few weeks, AG1 is giving away a full supplement package with your first subscription to AG one.

They're giving away a free bottle of vitamin D three K two, a bottle of omega-3 fish oil capsules, and a sample pack of the new sleep formula AGZ, which by the way is now the only sleep supplement I take. It's fantastic. My sleep on AGZ is out of this world good. AGZ is a drink, so it eliminates the need to take a lot of pills. It tastes great.

And like I said, it has me sleeping incredibly well, waking up more refreshed than ever. I absolutely love it. Again, this is a limited time offer, so make sure to go to drinkag1.com slash huberman to get started today.

Taste Buds; Bitter

If you would describe the sequence of neural events leading to a perceptual event of taste. We have taste baths distributed in various parts of the tongue. So there is a map on the distribution of taste buds. But each taste bud has around a hundred taste receptor cells. And those stage receptor cells can be of five. Types, yeah, sweet, sour, bitter, salty, or umami. And for the most part, All taste bats have the representation of all five taste quads.

Now, there's no question that there is a slight bias for some tastes. Like bitter is particularly enriched at the very back of your tongue. And there is a teleological basis for that, actually a biological basis for that. That's the last line of defense before you swallow something bad. And so let's make sure that the very back of your tongue has plenty of this bad news receptor. So that if they get activated, you can trigger a gagging reflex.

and get rid of this that otherwise may kill you. The important thing is that, you know, after the receptors for these five the the detectors, the molecules that sense Sweet, sour, beetlesalt, tumami. These are receptors, proteins found on the surface of taste receptor cells that interact with these chemicals. And once they interact, then they trigger the cascade of events, biochemical events inside the cell that now sends an electrical signal that says

There is sweet here, or there is salt here. Let's compare and contrast sweet and bitter.

Sweet vs Bitter, Sensory Perception from Tongue to Brain

As we follow their lines from the tongue to the brain. So the first thing is that the two evoke diametrically opposed behavior. If we have to come up with two sensory experiences that represent polar opposites, it will be sweet and bitter. So then the signals, if we follow now these two lines, they're really like two separate keys at the two ends of this keyboard. And you press one key and you activate this cord, so you activate the sweet cells throughout your oral cavity.

And they all converge into a group of sweet neurons in the next station, which is still outside the brain, is one of the chase ganglia. These are the neurons that innervate your tongue and the oral cavity. Where do they sit approximately? Are they around there. Yeah. Right here around the the lymph nodes more or less. You got it. And there are two main ganglia. that innervate the vast majority of all taste buds in the oral capital. And then from there that sweet signal goes onto the brainstem.

The brainstem is the entry of the body into the brain. And there are different areas of the brainstem, and there are different groups of neurons in the brainstem, and there's a unique area in a unique topographically defined Uh location In the rostral side of the brainstem that receives all of the taste in.

A very dense area of the brain. A very d rich area of the brain, exactly. And from there the sweet signal goes to this other area, higher up on the brain stem, and then it goes through A number of stations where that sweet signal goes from sweet neuron to sweet neuron to sweet neuron to eventually get to your cord. And once it gets to your taste cortex, that's where meaning is imposed into that signal. It's then this is what the data suggests.

That now you can identify this as a sweet stimuli. And how quickly does that all happen? You know, the time scale of the nervous system it Fast, yeah? And within less than a second. Yeah. And and in fact, we can demonstrate this because we can stick electrodes at each of these stations. You deliver the stimuli, and within a fraction of a second, you see now the response in this following stations. Now it gets to the cortex, and now in there you impose meaning to that taste.

There is an area of your brain that represents the taste of sweet. In taste cortex and a different area that represents the taste of bitter. In essence, there is a topographic map. Of this taste qualities inside your brain. How much plasticity do you think there is there? And in particular across the lifespan? Because I think one of the most salient examples of this is that kids don't seem to like certain vegetables, but they all are hardwired to like sweet taste.

Taste Plasticity & Changing Food Preferences

And yet you could also imagine that one of the reasons why they may eventually grow to incorporate vegetables is because of some knowledge that vegetables might be good for you. Better for them. Is there a change in the receptors? That can explain the transition from uh wanting to avoid vegetables to being willing to eat vegetables. Simply in childhood to to early development. But predetermined hardwire doesn't mean that's not modulated by learning or experience, it only means that you are born

Liking sweet and disliking bitter. And we have many examples of plasticity. Coffee. It has an associated gain to the system. And that gain to the system, that positive valence that emerges out of that negative signal is sufficient to create that positive association. And in the case of coffee, of course, is caffeine activating a whole group of neurotransmitter systems that give you that high associated with coffee.

So yes, the state system is changeable, it's malleable, and is subjected to learning and experience.

Taste Modulation; Salt

Can you imagine a sort of uh system by which people could leverage that? Where does this this desensitizing happens? That's the term that we use, eh? I think it happening at multiple stations. It's happening at the receptor level, i.e., the cells in your tongue that are sensing that sugar. As you activate this receptor and it's triggering activity after activity after activity, eventually you exhaust.

The receptor. Again, I'm using terms which are extraordinarily loose. The receptor gets to a point where he undergoes a set of changes, chemical changes. where it now signals far less efficiently Or it even gets removed from the surface of the cell. And that is a huge side of this modulation. And then the next, I believe, is the integrated, again, loss of signaling that happens by continuous activation of the circuit at each of these different neural stations.

From the tongue to the ganglia, from the ganglia to the first station in the brainstem, a second station in the brainstem, to the thalamus, then to the cortex. So there are multiple steps that this signal is traveling. Now you might say, why if this is a label line, why do you need to have so many stations? And that's because the taste system is so important to ensure

That you get what you need to survive, that it has to be subjected to modulation by the internal state. And each of these nodes provides a new site. to give it plasticity and modulation. I'm gonna give you one example of of of how the internal state changes the way the taste system works. Salt is very appetitive at low concentrations.

And that's because we need it. It's our electrolyte balance requires salt. Every one of their neurons uses salt as the most important of the ions, you know, with potassium to ensure that you can transfer these electrical signals. within and between neurons. But at high concentrations, let's say ocean water is incredibly averse.

And we all know this because we go into the ocean and then when you get it in your mouth, it's not that great. However, if I salt deprive you, now this incredibly high concentration of salt, one molar sodium chloride. becomes amazingly appetitive and attractive. What's going on in here? Your tongue is telling you this is horrible, but your brain is telling you you need it. And this is what we call the modulation of the T system by the internal state.

Sponsor: LMNT

I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Element. Element is an electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't. That means the electrolytes, sodium, magnesium, and potassium in the correct amounts, but no sugar. Proper hydration is critical for optimal brain and body function. Even a slight degree of dehydration can diminish cognitive and physical performance.

It's also important that you get adequate electrolytes. The electrolytes, sodium, magnesium, and potassium, are vital for functioning of all the cells in your body, especially your neurons or your nerve cells.

Drinking element dissolved in water makes it very easy to ensure that you're getting adequate hydration and adequate electrolytes. To make sure that I'm getting proper amounts of hydration and electrolytes, I dissolve one packet of element in about 16 to 32 ounces of water when I first wake up in the morning, and I drink that basically first thing in the morning.

I'll also drink Element dissolved in water during any kind of physical exercise that I'm doing, especially on hot days when I'm sweating a lot and losing water and electrolytes. Element has a bunch of great tasting flavors. I love the raspberry, I love the citrus flavor. Right now Element has a limited edition lemonade flavor that is absolutely delicious. I hate to say that I love one more than all the others.

But this lemonade flavor is right up there with my favorite other one, which is raspberry or watermelon. Again, I can't pick just one flavor. I love them all. If you'd like to try Element, you can go to drinkelement.com slash Huberman, spelled drinkelmnt.com slash huberman, to claim a free element sample pack with a purchase of any element drink mix. Again, that's drinkelement.com slash huberman to claim a free sample pack.

Gut-Brain Signaling

I'd love for you to talk about the aspects of gut brain signaling that drive our per or change our perceptions and behaviors that are completely beneath our awareness. Yes. You know, the brain. needs to monitor the state of every one of our organs. It has to do it. This is the only way that the brain can ensure that every one of those organs are working together.

In a way that we have healthy physiology. This is a two-way highway where the brain is not only monitoring, but is now modulating back. What the body needs to do. And that includes all the way from monitoring the frequency of heartbeat. And the way that inspiration and aspirations in the breathing cycle operate to what happens when you ingest. sugar and fat. Let me give you a an example. So Pavlov in his classical experiments in conditioning, you know, associative conditioning, he would

Take a bell, it would ring the bell every time it was going to feed the dog. Eventually the dog learned to associate the ringing of the bell. with food coming. The dog now, in the presence of the bell alone, will start to salivate.

And we will call that, you know, neurologically speaking, an anticipatory response. Neurons in the brain that form that association now represent food is coming And they're sending a signal to motor neurons to go into your salivary glands to squeeze them so you release, you know, you know, saliva because you know food is coming.

But what's even more remarkable is that those animals are also releasing insulin in response to a bell. Somehow the brain created these associations and there are neurons in your brain now that no food is coming. and send a signal somehow all the way down to your pancreas, then now it says release insulin because sugar It's coming down! Now the main highway that is communicating the state of the body

with the brain is a specific bundle of nerves which emerge from the vagal ganglia, the nodos ganglia. And so it's the vagus nerve that is innervating the majority of the organs in your body. It's monitoring their function, sending a signal to the brain, and now the brain going back down and saying. This is going all right, do this, or this is not going so well, do that. And I should point out, as you well know, every organ, spleen, pancreas, they all must they all must be monitored.

I have no doubt that diseases that we have normally associated with metabolism, physiology, and even immunity are likely to emerge as diseases, conditions, states of the brain. I don't think obesity is a disease of metabolism. I believe obesity is a disease of brain circuits. I do as well. And so this this view that we have, you know, been working on for the longest time, because

You know, the molecules that we're dealing with are in the body, not in the head. You know, led us to you know to view of course these issues and problems as being one of metabolism, physiology, and so forth. They remain to be. The carriers of the ultimate signal, but the brain ultimately appears to be the conductor of this orchestra of physiology and metabolism.

Let's go to the gut brain and sugar. The vagus nerve is made out of many thousands of fibers that make this gigantic bundle. And it's likely, as we're speaking, that each of these fibers they carry meaning that's associated with their specific task. This group of fibers is telling the brain about the state of your heart. This group of fibers is telling the brain about the state of your gut. This is telling your brain about its nutritional state. They are again to

Make the same simple example: the keys of this piano. Now, the reason this is relevant because the magic of this gut brain act. Is the fact that you have these thousands of fibers really doing different functions. Okay, let me tell you about the gut brain axis.

Sugar Appetite & Gut-Brain Axis

and our insatiable appetite for sugar. This is work of my own laboratory that began long ago when we discovered the sweet receptor. You can now engineer mice that lack these receptors. So, in essence, these animals will be unable to taste sweet. And if you give a normal mouse a bottle containing sweet, And we're gonna put either sugar or an artificial sweetener. Alright? They both are sweet. They have slightly different taste. But that's simply because artificial sweeteners have some off taste.

But as far as the sweet receptor is concerned, they both activate the same receptor, trigger the same signal. And if you give an animal an option of a bottle containing sugar or a sweetener versus water, This animal will drink ten to one from the bottle containing sweet.

That's the taste system. It animal goes, samples each one, leaks a couple of leaks, and then says, uh-uh, that's the one I want because it's appetitive and because I love it. Now we're gonna take the mice and we're gonna genetically engineer it. to remove the sweet receptor.

So these mice no longer have in their oral cavity any sensors that can detect sweetness, be it a sugar molecule, be it an artificial sweetener, be it anything else that tastes sweet. And if you give these mice an option between Sweet versus water, it will drink equally well from both because he cannot tell them apart. Because it doesn't have the receptors for sweet, so that sweet bottle tastes just like water. But if I keep the mouse in that cage,

For the next 48 hours, something extraordinary happens when I come 48 hours later. The mouse is drinking almost exclusively. from the sugar bottle. During those forty eight hours, the mouse learned That there is something in that bottle that makes me feel good. And that is the bottle I want to consume. And that is the fundamental basis. of our unquenchable desire and our craving for sugar and is mediated by the gut brain action.

So we reason, if this is true, and it's the gut brain axis that's driving sugar preference, then there should be a group of neurons in the brain that are responding to post-ingestive sugar. and lo and behold we identify a group of neurons in the brain that does this and these neurons receive their input directly from the god brain And so what's happening is that sugar is recognized normally by the tongue.

Activates an appetitive response. Now you ingest it, and now it activates a selective group of cells in your intestines. That now sends a signal to the brain via the vagal ganglia that says, I got what I need. The tongue doesn't know that you got what you need. It only knows that you tasted it. This knows that it got to the point that it's going to be used, which is the gut. And now he sends the signal to now reinforce

The consumption of this thing because this is the one that I needed: sugar, source of energy. So these are gut cells. They recognize the sugar molecule, send a signal, and that signal is received by the vagal neuron directly. Got it. And sends a signal through the gut brain axis. to the cell bodies of these neurons in the vagal ganglia and from there to the brain stem.

Now trigger the preference for sugar. You see, you want the brain to know that you had successful ingestion and breakdown of whatever you consume into the building blocks of life. And you know, glucose, amino acids, fat. And so you want to make sure that once they are in the form, that intestines can now absorb them. is where you get the signal back saying, This is what I want. Okay?

Sponsor: Function

I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Function. Last year I became a Function member after searching for the most comprehensive approach to lab testing. Function provides over 100 advanced lab tests that give you a key snapshot of your entire bodily health.

This snapshot offers you with insights on your heart health, hormone health, immune functioning, nutrient levels, and much more. Function not only provides testing of over a hundred biomarkers key to your physical and mental health, But it also analyzes these results and provides insights from top doctors who are expert in the relevant areas. For example, in one of my first tests with function, I learned that I had elevated levels of mercury in my blood.

Function not only helped me detect that, but offered insights into how best to reduce my mercury levels, which included limiting my tuna consumption, I'd been eating a lot of tuna, while also making an effort to eat more leafy greens and supplementing with NAC and acetylcysteine, both of which can support glutathione production and detoxification. And I should say, by taking a second function test,

That approach worked. Comprehensive blood testing is vitally important. There's so many things related to your mental and physical health that can only be detected in a blood test. The problem is blood testing has always been very expensive and complicated. In contrast, I've been super impressed by function simplicity and at the level of cost. It is very affordable. As a consequence, I decided to join their scientific advisory board, and I'm thrilled that they're sponsoring the podcast.

If you'd like to try function, you can go to functionhealth.com slash huberman. Function currently has a wait list of over 250,000 people. They're offering early access to Huberman Podcast listeners. Again, that's functionhealth.com/slash Huberman to get early access to function.

Artificial Sweeteners, Sugar Cravings

Now, let me just take it one step further. This now sugar molecules activates this unique gut brain circuit. That now drives the development of our preference for sugar. A key element of this circuit. Is that the sensors in the gut that recognize the sugar do not recognize artificial sweeteners. It's a completely different molecule that only recognizes the glucose molecule, not artificial sweeteners.

This has a profound impact on the effect of ultimately artificial sweeteners in curbing our appetite. our craving, our insatiable desire for sugar. Since they don't activate the gut brain, They'll never satisfy the craving for sugar, like sugar does. We have a mega problem with overconsumption of sugar and fat. In we're facing a unique time in our evolution where diseases of malnutrition are due to overnutrition.

Historically, diseases of malnutrition have always been linked to undernutrition. But I wanna just go back to the notion of you know these brain centers that are ultimately

Taste & Essential Nutrients; Highly Processed Foods; Brain & Food Choices

The ones that are being activated by these essential nutrients. So sugar, fat, and amino acids are building blocks. our diets and this is across all animals So it's not unreasonable then to assume that dedicated brain circuit would have evolved to ensure their recognition, their ingestion, and the reinforcement that that is what I need.

And indeed, you know, animals evolve these two systems. One is the taste system that allows you to recognize them and trigger these predetermined hardwired immediate responses, yes? You know, oh my god, this is so delicious, it's fatty or umami recognizing amino acids. Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại.

In the wisdom of evolution, that's good but doesn't quite do it. You wanna make sure that these things get to the place where they're needed. They are needed in your intestines, where they are going to be absorbed as the nutrients that will support life. And the brain wants to know this. Highly processed foods are hijacking, you know, co-opting the circuits in a way.

That it would have never happened in nature and then we not only find these things up appetitive and palatable, but in addition we are continuously reinforcing you know the wanting In a way that, oh my God, this is so great. What do I feel like eating? Let me have more of this. Well, this is why I think a lot of data are now starting to support the idea that.

While indeed the laws of thermodynamics apply, calories ingested versus calories burned is a very real thing, right? The appetite for certain foods. And the the wanting and the liking are phenomena of the nervous system, brain and gut as you've beautifully described, and that That changes over time depending on how we are receiving these nutrients. Absolutely. Understanding the circuit.

Is giving us important insights and how ultimately, hopefully, we can improve human health and make a meaningful difference. Now it's very easy to try to, you know, connect the dots, A to B, B to C, C to D. And I think there's a lot more complexity to it. But I do think that the lessons that are emerging out of understanding the how these circuits operate can ultimately inform

how we deal with our diets in a way that we avoid what we're facing now, you know, as a society. Yeah. I mean, it's nuts that the overnutrition happens to be such a prevalent problem. Yeah. And I also think the training of people who are thinking about metabolic science and metabolic disease is largely divorced from the training of the neuroscientists and vice versa.

No one field is to blame, but I fully agree that the the brain is is the key over or the nervous system to be uh more accurate, is the one of the key overlooked features. It's the arbitrary. Ultimately it's the arbiter. of many of these pathways.

Acknowledgements

On behalf of myself uh and certainly on behalf of all the listeners, I want to thank you first of all for the incredible work that you've been doing now for decades in vision, in taste, and in this bigger issue of how we perceive and experience life. It's uh truly pioneering and incredible work and I feel quite lucky to have

been on the sidelines seeing this over the years and hearing the talks and reading the countless beautiful papers. But also for your time today to come down here and talk to us about what drives you and the discoveries you've made. Thank you ever so much. It was great fun. Thank you for having me. I'll do it again.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android