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Browsing by tag: olfaction

An organism’s reaction to repugnant odors

Posted by Robin on 11 December 2023 Leave a Comment

In a study involving nematode worms, scientists found that when these worms were exposed to a specific compound released by harmful bacteria, it triggered the activation of a neural pathway. This activation led to an increase in the lifespan of the worms and a reduction in protein aggregation, which is known to be a contributing factor in the development of neurodegenerative illnesses.

An organism’s reaction to repugnant odors can be an indicator of the organism’s capacity to protect itself from harmful substances and live longer. This at least is what happens in the case of nematodes of the species Caenorhabditis elegans.

— Read more in The Scent of Longevity: How Smelling Harmful Substances May Prolong Life at SciTechDaily.

The two sides do synergize

Posted by Robin on 4 November 2023 2 Comments

The findings suggest that the brain does make use of the different arrival times. When an odour was delivered to a single nostril, the side of the brain closest to that nostril reacted first, and a reaction then followed in the opposite side of the brain. “There seem to be actually two odour representations, corresponding to odour information coming from each nostril,” [neuroscientist Naz] Dikecligil says.

When the researchers provided a scent to both nostrils simultaneously, they saw that both sides of the brain recognized the scent faster than either did when it was delivered through only one nostril. This suggests that the two sides do synergize to some degree, even though one lags behind the other in encoding a scent, Dikecligil says.

— Read more in You smell your coffee in stereo: the brain records an odour’s spatial information at Nature.

Many learning bouts

Posted by Robin on 1 November 2023 Leave a Comment

Next, the team observed that some neurons respond differently to two very dissimilar odors, but the same to similar smells. The researchers called these neurons reliable cells. This small group of cells helps flies quickly distinguish between differing odors. Another much larger group of neurons responds unpredictably when exposed to similar smells. These neurons, which the researchers call unreliable cells, might help us learn to identify specific scents in a glass of wine, for example.

“The model we developed shows these unreliable cells are useful,” Srinivasan says. “But it requires many learning bouts to take advantage of them.”

— Read more in Smells like learning at EurekAlert.

Human subjects can actually navigate spaces using their nose

Posted by Robin on 31 October 2023 Leave a Comment

For the new experiment, 28 participants each entered the smellscape four times. The placement of eight "odor objects" in the environment—smells like orange or banana—always stayed the same. What changed was where participants were placed in the virtual reality arena and which target odor they needed to find.

The results surprised and excited the researchers. "Although the human sense of smell has been poorly regarded across the five different senses, we are now able to establish that human subjects can actually navigate spaces using their nose in the context of a particular type of virtual reality environment," Gottfried says.

— Read more in How humans use their sense of smell to find their way at Medical Xpress.

350 channels of odour information

Posted by Robin on 28 October 2023 3 Comments

The work resulted in a “principal odour map” – the olfactory equivalent of the colour palette you might use on a computer. “Anybody who’s looked at a map of colour in Photoshop knows intuitively what’s going on,” says Mainland, and just as the “colour space” in such a map helps us say that purple is closer to red than to green, the team’s odour map allowed them to locate scents in a kind of multi-dimensional “smell space”.

“RGB is three-dimensional, but you can depict it on a flat piece of paper,” [Alex] Wiltschko says. “There’s three channels of colour information in our eye, but there’s 350 channels of odour information in our nose.

— Read more in ‘Giving computers a sense of smell’: the quest to scientifically map odours at The Guardian.

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