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    Home » Are Artificial Flavors Hacking Your High?
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    Are Artificial Flavors Hacking Your High?

    adminBy adminMay 8, 202606 Mins Read0 Views
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    Are Artificial Flavors Hacking Your High?
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    Terpenes are chemistry and neurobiology working together. Artificial flavors are something else entirely. Here’s what the difference actually means for your cannabis experience.

    In cannabis culture, it’s often said that cannabinoids are the “engine,” while terpenes are the “steering wheel.” In fact, as a phrase attributed to scientist and neurologist Ethan Russo goes: “Terpenes are modulators of experience.” So terpenes are much more than simple aromatic molecules. But what is the difference between terpenes and artificial flavors? Why do some “flavors” hack the brain? Are we losing the true essence of the plant in the pursuit of a, shall we say, “manufactured” intensity?

    “Terpenes are modulators of experience.”

    Ethan Russo, neurologist and cannabis researcher

    “In plants, they evolved as part of a defense and communication system—repelling pests, attracting pollinators, and responding to environmental stressors. In humans, those same molecules interact with receptors involved in mood, alertness, and perception. When consumed alongside cannabinoids, terpenes influence how those cannabinoids are experienced by shaping intensity, duration, and qualitative effects,” says Daniel Cook, CEO of True Terpenes, a leading company in terpene science and production. “It’s not mysticism: it’s chemistry and neurobiology working together.”

    Here, too, the winds of change are blowing. Specifically, the industry has expanded (and is constantly being reconfigured) toward new flavor experiences: intense, sweet, and “dessert-like” profiles that make an immediate impression and resonate positively with many consumers. These profiles highlight creativity and innovation, and have helped attract new people to the 420 segment.

    At the same time, there has always been a strong interest in more complex and earthy aromas, which have long defined cannabis. These aromas unfold gradually and faithfully reflect the plant, tending to prioritize depth, structure, and continuity throughout the experience.

    “Both approaches have a place. What matters is clarity of intent and matching the sensory design to the consumer. Some people want excitement right away, others want a slower build, and many enjoy both depending on the moment. The opportunity for the industry is to recognize that not all flavor journeys are the same,” Cook adds.

    How Artificial Flavors Hack the Brain

    However, it’s worth mentioning that highly artificial flavors “hack” the brain’s reward system and deliver experiences that hit fast and hard. Why? Because “they trigger the brain’s reward circuitry — especially dopamine — by delivering intense sensory signals without the contextual cues the body expects,” Cook explains. A similar mechanism can be seen with sugar.

    “Natural aromas and flavors tend to unfold gradually and are processed alongside texture, minor compounds, and other sensory variables. One invites the brain into an experience; the other demands attention instantly. That difference helps explain why some flavors feel satisfying while others feel exciting but fleeting.”

    “One invites the brain into an experience; the other demands attention instantly.”

    Daniel Cook, CEO, True Terpenes

    This sensory urgency leads us to a deeper issue: the metabolic challenge. Specifically, when the body and brain receive “flavor” signals stripped of nutrients. “When the brain detects certain flavor cues — like ‘orange’ — it anticipates corresponding nutrients and metabolic feedback. When those nutrients don’t arrive, the body sometimes enters a seeking loop, essentially signaling that something is missing. This mismatch between sensory input and metabolic output helps explain why intensity without substance often leaves people wanting more,” Cook explains.

    Chemical Cosmetics: When Flavor Masks Quality

    For all these reasons, “artificial flavors” are considered a form of “chemical cosmetics,” since — in reality — these “artificial flavors” can mask quality rather than reflect it. “It’s a fair analogy… Just as cosmetics can obscure natural cues, synthetic flavors communicate through a different sensory channel than natural systems. When aroma is used to mask instead of signal quality, consumers lose an intuitive feedback mechanism that would otherwise guide good choices,” Cook observes.

    Natural vs. artificial: the key difference
    Natural terpenes unfold gradually alongside texture, minor compounds and other sensory variables. Artificial flavors are engineered to hit the brain’s dopamine reward system fast, creating intensity without the substance the body expects. One provides closure. The other encourages repetition.

    Humans have been exposed to plant terpenes for thousands of years through food, herbs, and the environment. Our bodies recognize them. “Many modern flavor compounds are newer and can be useful tools, but they don’t always interact with the body in the same intuitive way,” adds Cook, who is currently working on Headstash, a product line that, he says, “changes how aroma is preserved and experienced in cannabis.”

    Can You Retrain Your Palate?

    But no matter what, that biological intuition isn’t lost, but sometimes buried beneath the roar of overstimulation. Then comes a hopeful question: can the palate be retrained after inhabiting a world of ultra-intense flavors? “Yes,” Cook reassures. “When people reduce their intake of ultra-flavored products, their senses tend to reset. Flavors and aromas that once felt muted start to become vivid again. Many consumers are surprised to rediscover how layered cannabis can be when nothing is overpowering it. Subtlety becomes enjoyable once the baseline shifts.”

    “Many consumers are surprised to rediscover how layered cannabis can be when nothing is overpowering it. Subtlety becomes enjoyable once the baseline shifts.”

    Daniel Cook, CEO, True Terpenes

    Indeed, natural terpenes tend to feel fuller: they grow, plateau, and settle in a way the body recognizes. That arc can feel stabilizing and satisfying. In contrast, artificial flavors are usually designed for a quick hit: they deliver an immediate rush, but because they fade quickly, they can leave the user wanting more. One provides closure. The other encourages repetition.

    Terpenes as the Steering Wheel

    Ultimately, this ability to provide “closure” and fulfillment lies in the most celebrated technical function of terpenes: their capacity to direct the effect. “Different terpenes engage different neurological pathways. Some are associated with alertness and focus, while others promote calm or physical relaxation. They don’t replace cannabinoids — they shape how cannabinoids are interpreted by the brain,” Cook points out.

    In the end, what the consumer seeks is a specific response from their own body. Therefore, understanding how terpenes alter the feeling of being “high” versus relaxation is the master key to conscious use. To start the engine, you also have to know how to steer.

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