• About
  • Login to comment
    • Bluesky
    • RSS
    • Twitter

Now Smell This

a blog about perfume

Menu ▼
  • Perfume Reviews
  • New Perfumes
  • Archives

Differences in scent perception

Posted by Robin on 3 May 2019 7 Comments

These — and dozens of other differences in scent perception — are detailed in a new study, published this week in the journal PNAS. The work provides new evidence of how extraordinarily different one person’s “smellscape” may be from another’s. It’s not that some people are generally better smellers, like someone else may have better eyesight, it’s that any one person might experience certain scents more intensely than their peers.

— Read more at You Will Never Smell My World the Way I Do at The New York Times.

Filed Under: perfume in the news
Tagged With: olfaction

Advertisement


7 Comments

Leave a comment, or read more about commenting at Now Smell This. Here's our privacy policy, and a handy emoticon chart.

  1. Regina says:
    3 May 2019 at 11:41 am

    I like this. Part of what I like is that we’ve sort of always known this and had language for it; “to my nose…”; “on me…”

    Log in to Reply
    • Robin says:
      4 May 2019 at 1:15 pm

      Yes, and add differences in skin odor and texture, humidity issues, age of the fragrance itself, etc etc, you’re really never smelling the same thing.

      Log in to Reply
  2. austenfan says:
    3 May 2019 at 2:48 pm

    Thanks for this link, Robin. Very interesting.

    Log in to Reply
    • Robin says:
      4 May 2019 at 1:16 pm

      Glad you liked it 🙂

      Log in to Reply
  3. therabbitsflower says:
    4 May 2019 at 12:56 am

    I really enjoyed the article. My coworker heard about the research on the radio this morning. That kind of surprised me because she just listens to the local morning radio show.

    Log in to Reply
    • Robin says:
      4 May 2019 at 1:16 pm

      Oh, interesting!

      Log in to Reply
  4. rayleighblue says:
    7 May 2019 at 5:55 am

    Interesting, I wonder how this worked out for that hunter-gatherer group you mentioned in another article (I think it was earlier this year?) that had an abstract vocabulary for scent. I’d be curious to ask them how they dealt with different people’s perception of smells.

    Log in to Reply

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Advertisement

Search

Recent reviews

Atelier Cologne Love Osmanthus
Moschino Toy Boy
Arquiste Misfit
Diptyque Eau Capitale
Zoologist Bee
Parfum d’Empire Immortelle Corse
Comme des Garcons Series 10 Clash
Frédéric Malle Rose & Cuir
L’Artisan Parfumeur Le Chant de Camargue
Yves Saint Laurent Grain de Poudre
Régime des Fleurs Chloë Sevigny Little Flower
Chanel 1957
Gallivant Los Angeles
Amouage Portrayal Woman

Blogroll

Bois de Jasmin
Grain de Musc
Perfume Posse
The Non-Blonde
More blogs...

Perfumista lists

100 fragrances every perfumista should try
And 25 more fragrances every perfumista should smell
50 masculine fragrances every perfumista should try
26 vintage fragrances every perfumista should try
25 rose fragrances every perfumista should try
11 Cheap Perfumes Beauty Outsiders Love

Favorite posts

The Great Perfume Reduction Plan
Why I Love Old School Chypres
New to perfume and want to learn more?
How to make fragrance last through the day
Fragrance concentrations: sorting it all out
On reformulations, or why your favorite perfume doesn’t smell like it used to
How to get fragrance samples
Perfume for Life: How Long Will Your Fragrance Collection Last?

Upcoming

List of upcoming Friday projects

6 January ~ damage poll

31 January ~ winter reading poll

Back to Top

Home
Archives
About Now Smell This :: Privacy Policy
Perfume Reviews
New Perfumes
General Perfume Articles
The Monday Mail

Glossary of Perfume Terms
Perfume FAQ
Perfume Books

Noses ~ Perfumers A-E :: F-K :: L-S :: T-Z

Perfume Houses A-B :: C :: D-E :: F-G
H-J :: K-L :: M :: N-O :: P :: Q-R :: S
T :: U-Z

Copyright © 2005-2026 Now Smell This. All rights reserved.