1 / 16

Olfaction

Olfaction. The Sense of Smell. Smell helps us:. Avoid dangerous situations (fumes, smoke) Avoid consuming poisonous substances and spoiled food (sour milk) Choose mates?. What are olfactory stimuli?. Odorants (airborne molecules) Odorants must be volatile (they give off vapors)

dorjan
Download Presentation

Olfaction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Olfaction The Sense of Smell

  2. Smell helps us: • Avoid dangerous situations (fumes, smoke) • Avoid consuming poisonous substances and spoiled food (sour milk) • Choose mates?

  3. What are olfactory stimuli? • Odorants (airborne molecules) • Odorants must be volatile (they give off vapors) • More vapors are given off when an odorant is heated!! (warm soup smells better than cold soup)

  4. Odorants reach olfactory receptors by: • 1. Being inhaled through the nose. • 2. Through the mouth (vapors circulate up through throat)

  5. Olfaction- originates in the nasal cavity

  6. Olfactory system structures

  7. Olfactory Receptor Neurons • Carry impulses directly to the brain • Live for 5- 8 weeks & then die.

  8. Summary: olfactory pathway • Olfactory receptor neurons detect odorants in mucosa. • Signals are sent via olfactory receptor neurons to bulb structures (glomeruli). • Mitral and tufted cells carry signals to orbitofrontal cortex, temporal lobe, and the limbic system.

  9. Which animal is most sensitive to smell? • Dogs 300-10,000 times more sensitive to smell than humans • Why? Humans have 10-40 million olfactory receptor neurons, dogs have over a billion!!

  10. Odor Hedonics • What are “pleasant” and “unpleasant” odors? Variability is high. • Most universally-rated “pleasant” odorant is vanilla.

  11. How is perception affected by odor? • Odor enhances our experience of the world (food, surroundings, people). • We associate memories with certain odorants. • We lose the ability to experience “flavors” if our sense of smell is impaired.

  12. Anosmia: loss of sense of smell • May be to specific odors or all odors. • Caused by infection to nasal cavity or brain injury (frontal lobe). • About 2 million people in US are anosmic.

  13. Olfaction and behavior • A. Infant perception & attachment • Babies enthusiastically “orient” to pleasant odors (banana, vanilla) and cry/grimace to unpleasant odors (shrimp; rotten eggs). • Babies can discriminate their mother’s scent from other women (Macfarlane, 1975).

  14. Olfaction and Behavior • B. Smell may alter hormonal activity • McClintock Effect: women’s menstrual cycles synchronize when they live together (dorms).

  15. Olfaction and behavior • C. Mate Selection • Females rate males with immunity profiles more dissimilar to their own (Wederkind et al., 1995) as smelling “more pleasant.” Males with very similar immunity profiles are rated as smelling “less pleasant.” • What is the current theory underlying this finding?

  16. Smell may provide a clue about our suitability as a mate? • It’s possible that choosing a mate with an immunity profile very similar to our own, may result in the expression of unwanted recessive genes in our offspring. • Smell may provide us with a “cue” in which we can detect suitable mates who will produce healthy viable offspring.

More Related