The ability to detect and react to the smell of a potential threat is a precondition of our and other mammals’ survival. Using a novel technique, researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have been able to study what happens in the brain when the central nervous system judges a smell to represent danger. The study, which is published in PNAS, indicates that negative smells associated with unpleasantness or unease are processed earlier than positive smells and trigger a physical avoidance response.
“The human avoidance response to unpleasant smells
associated with danger has long been seen as a conscious cognitive process, but
our study shows for the first time that it’s unconscious and extremely rapid,”
says the study’s first author Behzad Iravani, researcher at the Department of
Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet.
The olfactory organ takes up about five per cent of
the human brain and enables us to distinguish between many million different
smells. A large proportion of these smells are associated with a threat to our
health and survival, such as that of chemicals and rotten food. Odour signals
reach the brain within 100 to 150 milliseconds after being inhaled through the
nose.
The survival of all living organisms depends on their
ability to avoid danger and seek rewards. In humans, the olfactory sense seems
particularly important for detecting and reacting to potentially harmful
stimuli.
It has long been a mystery just which neural
mechanisms are involved in the conversion of an unpleasant smell into avoidance
behaviour in humans. One reason for this is the lack of non-invasive methods of
measuring signals from the olfactory bulb, the first part of the rhinencephalon
(literally “nose brain”) with direct (monosynaptic) connections to the important
central parts of the nervous system that helps us detect and remember
threatening and dangerous situations and substances.
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet have now
developed a method that for the first time has made it possible to measure
signals from the human olfactory bulb, which processes smells and in turn can
transmits signals to parts of the brain that control movement and avoidance
behaviour.
Their results are based on three experiments in which
participants were asked to rate their experience of six different smells, some
positive, some negative, while the electrophysiological activity of the
olfactory bulb when responding to each of the smells was measured.
“It was clear that the bulb reacts specifically and
rapidly to negative smells and sends a direct signal to the motor cortex within
about 300 ms,” says the study’s last author Johan Lundström, associate
professor at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet.
“The signal causes the person to unconsciously lean back and away from the
source of the smell.”
He continues:
“The results suggest that our sense of smell is
important to our ability to detect dangers in our vicinity, and much of this
ability is more unconscious than our response to danger mediated by our senses
of vision and hearing.”
Image & info: https://news.ki.se/sense-of-smell-is-our-most-rapid-warning-system
Journal article: https://www.pnas.org/content/118/42/e2101209118
Source: Sense
of smell is our most rapid warning system – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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