Sense of Smell is Million Times More
Accurate than We Thought
By April Reese |
March 20, 2014 12:59 pm
Unlike sights and sounds, smells are
complex, made up of hundreds of different odorous molecules. The scent of a
rose, for example, has 275 of them. But a dominant few are what make a rose
smell like a rose – at least to our noses.
So just how sophisticated is our sense of
smell? If the rose was buried in, say, a big bouquet of daisies and irises,
would we still be able to pick out the rose’s scent among the others?
Most likely, yes, a new study suggests. The experiment, conducted by
researchers at Rockefeller’s Laboratory of Neurogenetics, shows the human nose
is far more discerning than previously thought. While scientists had assumed
the average person could distinguish among about 10,000 smells, the Rockefeller
study puts that number way, way higher, at 1 trillion unique scents.
Sniffing Out Answers
Since smells are so multifaceted, the
research team needed to find out how well people could tell the difference
between scent mixtures that were similar, but not identical. So Andreas Keller,
who led the study, whipped up 200 odor cocktails, choosing from an ingredient
list of 128 odorous molecules that are the building blocks of orange,
spearmint, anise and many other scents. He varied the formula so that different
odor molecules dominated each of the mixtures. For each test in the experiment,
Keller and his team asked 28 volunteers to sniff three vials – two
containing the exact same cocktail, and one with a different mixture – and
identify the unique one.
While the sniffers’ responses varied quite
a bit, on average they easily could distinguish between mixtures that shared
less than 50 percent of the same components. Above that, it became harder to
tell the difference, although some volunteers could discriminate between
mixtures that were up to 90 percent similar.
“The message here is that we have more
sensitivity in our sense of smell than for which we give ourselves credit,”
says Leslie Vosshall, who heads the laboratory and co-authored the study. “We
just don’t pay attention to it and don’t use it in everyday life.”
Smell of Success
The new study, published this week in the
journal Science, puts the
nose far above the eyes and ears in its powers of discernment: researchers
estimate we can see between 2.3 million and 7.5 million different colors, and
we can hear about 340,000 tones.
And it’s quite likely that the human nose
actually can detect even more than 1 trillion smells, because scent molecules
combine in many more ways in the real world than the researchers were able to
mimic in the lab, Vosshall added.
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