Scientists who research the sense of taste divide people into three categories: nontasters, medium tasters
and supertasters. These classifications are based on the perception of a compound known as 6-n-propylthiouracil (PROP,
for short), which has a bitter taste that is perceptable to some, but not all, people. 25% of people, the nontasters,
will register nothing when they taste the compound. To 50% of the population, the medium tasters, PROP will taste
bitter, but not overly so. The remaining 25% of people are classified as supertasters and to them, the compound will
taste intensely bitter. The classification of "super taster" does not mean that one's sense of taste is
superior to another's, but that there is an increased level of sensitivity to various tastes on the tongue.
Supertasters have a much higher density of papillae, the small mushroom-like structures on the tongue that house taste buds, than medium and nontasters. Women are more likely to be supertasters than men are.



