Scent and Memory

Most of us do not give our sense of smell a passing thought unless there
are cookies in the oven or flowers in bloom. But scientist is probing
this under appreciated sense to better comprehend the working of our
brains, from memory formation to Alzheimer's disease.

Some of the latest finding:

q       Smell and memory are intimately related-just think about how
suddenly a familiar scent can whisk you into the past. Now a new study
shows that smell can help the brain encode memories, too. Volunteers
memorized the locations of several objects while smelling a rose scent,
and then some of them were exposed to the same scent while they slept.
Those with perfumed sleep remembered the locations of the objects much
better than their fragrance free peers did. Because the scent probably
reactivated memories stored temporarily in the hippocampus.

q       Neurodegenerative disease such as Alzheimer's and
parkinson's often damage the sense of smell first, because there is
more neurological machinery devoted to the other senses. A new
"sniff test" could provide an early warning for these diseases.
People with a normal sense of smell unconsciously stop sniffing as soon
as their brain detects an odor, but those with olfactory damage take the
same large sniff regardless of whether an odor is present, By measuring
the amount of air taken in during sniffs, the new test can reveal a
damaged sense of smell before it is otherwise noticeable.

q       But why do we sniff in the first place? Olfactory neurons, once
thought to respond only to the chemicals that constitute odors, have now
been shown to activate when air hits the inside of the nose. The harder
we sniff, the more excited these neurons become, and the better they are
able to detect and decode scents.

Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com

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