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Related Concept Videos

Olfaction01:25

Olfaction

47.9K
The sense of smell is achieved through the activities of the olfactory system. It starts when an airborne odorant enters the nasal cavity and reaches olfactory epithelium (OE). The OE is protected by a thin layer of mucus, which also serves the purpose of dissolving more complex compounds into simpler chemical odorants. The size of the OE and the density of sensory neurons varies among species; in humans, the OE is only about 9-10 cm2.
The olfactory receptors are embedded in the cilia of the...
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Physiology of Smell and Olfactory Pathway01:20

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Humans detect odors with the help of specialized cells located in the upper part of the nasal cavity, called olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs). ORNs possess hair-like structures called cilia, which are receptive to sensations from the inhaled air. When an odorant molecule binds to a specific receptor on the cell of the cilia, it leads to a series of events that ultimately cause the ORN to send electrical signals to the olfactory bulb in the brain through the olfactory nerves.
The olfactory...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Dec 26, 2025

Simple and Computer-assisted Olfactory Testing for Mice
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Simple and Computer-assisted Olfactory Testing for Mice

Published on: June 15, 2015

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Field-testing olfactory ability to understand human olfactory ecology.

Kara C Hoover1, Denisa Botescu2, Piotr Fedurek3

  • 1Department of Anthropology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska.

American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council
|March 11, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human olfactory ability shows no environmental variation, but women exhibit superior functional scent identification, particularly in food-rich settings. Lab tools may not accurately reflect natural olfactory performance.

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Area of Science:

  • Sensory neuroscience
  • Human olfaction research
  • Environmental psychology

Background:

  • Current understanding of human olfactory ability is limited by lab-based studies with nonrepresentative samples.
  • There is a need to assess olfactory variation in naturalistic settings.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate olfactory ability variation across different environments using a validated laboratory tool.
  • To investigate potential biases in odor identification studies.

Main Methods:

  • Two repeated measures experiments utilized a five-item odor identification test.
  • Participants identified odor sources in various environments, with consistency in odor labeling also examined.

Main Results:

  • No significant variation in olfactory ability was found due to environmental factors, potentially due to methodological biases.
  • Functional olfactory ability was significantly better in women, especially in food-rich environments.
  • Odor labeling consistency did not differ between sexes, but functional ability did.

Conclusions:

  • Environmental factors did not significantly impact olfactory ability in this study, but methodological limitations may confound results.
  • Odor identification is not recommended as a field tool due to potential biases.
  • Superior female functional olfactory ability, particularly in relation to food, has evolutionary and ecological implications.