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Sense: Smell (Olfaction)


Olfaction, the sense of smell, is the detection of chemicals dissolved in air (or, by animals that breathe water, in water). In vertebrates smells are sensed by the olfactory epithelium located in the nose and processed by the olfactory system.


How Smell Works


As discovered by Linda B. Buck and Richard Axel, mammals generally have about 1000 genes for odor receptors. Of these genes, only a portion code for functional odor receptors. Humans have 347 functional odor receptor genes; the other genes have nonsense mutations. This number was determined by analyzing the genome in the Human Genome Project; the number may vary among ethnic groups, and does vary among individuals. For example, not all people can smell amyl acetate (which smells like bananas).


Each olfactory receptor neuron in the nose expresses only one functional odor receptor. According to shape theory, each receptor detects a feature of the odor molecule. Odor receptor nerve cells function like a key lock sytem. If the odor molecules can fit into the lock the nerve cell will fire. An alternative theory, the Vibration theory proposed by Turin (1996, 2002), posits that odor receptors detect the frequencies of vibrations of odor molecules in the infrared range by electron tunnelling. The major predictions of this theory have been found lacking (Keller and Vosshall, 2004), though other studies disagree.


The axons from all the thousands of cells expressing the same odor receptor converge in the olfactory bulb. Mitral cells in the olfactory bulb send the information about the individual features to other parts of the olfactory system in the brain, which puts together the features into a representation of the odor. Since most odor molecules have many individual features, the combination of features gives the olfactory system a broad range of odors that it can detect.


Odor information is easily stored in long term memory and has strong connections to emotional memory. This is possibly due to the olfactory system's close anatomical ties to the limbic system and hippocampus, areas of the brain that have long been known to be involved in emotion and place memory, respectively.


To detect pheromones many vertebrates have an auxiliary olfactory sense organ called vomeronasal organ, located in the vomer, between the nose and the mouth. Snakes use it to smell prey, sticking their tongue out and touching it to the organ. Some mammals make a face called flehmen to direct air to this organ. In humans, the detection of pheromones is subliminal. These subliminal odor messages may transmit opposite immunological sexual compatibility. Finding a partner of non-similar immunological background may be evolutionarily advantageous because children born with a mixture of immunological systems are more likely to survive. It has been suggested that human females unconsciously use this process to recognize whom they find attractive.


Smell is extremely important for taste. The human tongue can only sense 4 different things (some studies say 5, 6 even 7, but still a limited number), while the nose can sense many thousands. This is the reason why you can taste very little when you have a blocked nose.


References



Source: Wikipedia

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The 5 Senses


Sight
Hearing
Smell
Taste
Touch