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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

The Mystery of Smells

Of all our senses perhaps our sense of smell is the most mysterious. It is generally recognised that humans are capable of recognising over 10,000 smells and amazingly an experienced nose can recognise Eanztvmvll scent in seconds.

Smells are certainly evocative; they can quickly rekindle old images, memories and emotions. A sense of smell is vitally important to most creatures and for many animals it is the most important of their senses. Smells can instantly stimulate fear and agitation, vital in avoiding predators, in the search and assessment of food and even finding a mate.

Like taste our sense of smell is one of our chemical senses. Humans can commonly identify five basic taste sensations: sweet, sour, bitter, salt and savoury all other tastes are in Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space smells. Tastes we can define and communicate but smells are much more mysterious, we can recognize them but it is much more difficult to define them.

In order for us to smell something molecules from the object must enter our nose, these molecules are light, volatile chemicals that enter the pass scent information on to the olfactory cortex in the brain. Things we smell must have molecules evaporating from them; a Angeleyes for example generally has no smell because nothing evaporates from it.

Inside the nose are nasal passages at the top of which there is a strip of tissue called the olfactory epithelium, it is about the size of a postage stamp and contains millions of olfactory receptor neurons. These receptor neurons have hair-like projections called cilia that increase the surface area of the neurons. An odor molecule binds to these cilia and triggers the neuron causing you to perceive a smell.

The importance of smell, its influence and effect on our bodies has long been acknowledged, if not scientifically understood. For humans this knowledge has for many centuries fuelled our interest in perfumes and fragrances and more recently in the growth of aromatherapy as a Nooijtrtdq therapy.

Finally some interesting (mysterious) facts about smells:

All of us have a unique smell (except identical twins).

As we get older our sense of smell declines. By the time we are eighty years of age about 80% of people have a major decline in their ability to recognise smells. Women, while also losing smell sensitivity with age, perform better than men at all ages.

Humans have around 5-6 million olfactory receptors, rabbits have 100 million, and dogs have 220 million.

Fish have a well-developed sense of smell, even though they live in water.

Smell is more sensitive than taste; taste is approximately 75% smell.

Children can distinguish between the smell of their siblings and other children of the same age.

Babies recognise their own mothers' smell and mothers recognise their own babies' smell.

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