Acci: “HEAD ON: APPLY DIRECTLY TO THE FOREHEAD......” lol
Sub: You are exactly right. When learning something new, the process of storing the info in your brain is called the encoding process. If you combine a sensory memory with the material being studied during the encoding prrocess, having that sensory memory available to you will greatly improve your ability when asked to recall the learned material.
A lot of studies have been done on this subject. I remember learning about them in college, but can’t find any now though I looked.
This effect has been demonstrated with all of the senses, not just with taste. It has even been suggested that smell is the most effective of all the senses. I would be willing to guess that this is part of the reason students do not “test well"- because, especially during standardized testing including SATs, ACTs, etc., they are often put in different rooms (sometimes rooms they have never been in), with teachers/proctors they do not know, and other students who are not their usual classmates. I think that this might create a sensory overload for them, disrupting their normally abilities to think and work.
However, there comes a point where catering to such issues as these could begin to hinder them in the dreaded “REAL WORLD” and the students need to learn to be able to function academically regardless of the environment.