1 research outputs found
The Biological Sense of Smell: Olfactory Search Behavior and a Metabolic View for Olfactory Perception
Part I of the thesis describes the olfactory searching and scanning behaviors of
rats in a wind tunnel, and a detailed movement analysis of terrestrial arthropod olfactory
scanning behavior. Olfactory scanning behaviors in rats may be a behavioral correlate to
hippocampal place cell activity.
Part II focuses on the organization of olfactory perception, what it suggests about
a natural order for chemicals in the environment, and what this in tum suggests about the
organization of the olfactory system. A model of odor quality space (analogous to the
"color wheel") is presented. This model defines relationships between odor qualities
perceived by human subjects based on a quantitative similarity measure. Compounds
containing Carbon, Nitrogen, or Sulfur elicit odors that are contiguous in this odor
representation, which thus allows one to predict the broad class of odor qualities a
compound is likely to elicit. Based on these findings, a natural organization for olfactory
stimuli is hypothesized: the order provided by the metabolic process. This hypothesis is
tested by comparing compounds that are structurally similar, perceptually similar, and
metabolically similar in a psychophysical cross-adaptation paradigm. Metabolically
similar compounds consistently evoked shifts in odor quality and intensity under cross-adaptation,
while compounds that were structurally similar or perceptually similar did not. This suggests that the olfactory system may process metabolically similar compounds using the same neural pathways, and that metabolic similarity may be the fundamental metric about which olfactory processing is organized. In other words, the olfactory system may be organized around a biological basis.
The idea of a biological basis for olfactory perception represents a shift in how
olfaction is understood. The biological view has predictive power while the current
chemical view does not, and the biological view provides explanations for some of the
most basic questions in olfaction, that are unanswered in the chemical view. Existing
data do not disprove a biological view, and are consistent with basic hypotheses that arise
from this viewpoint. </p