WARNING: P45 made this note and was not rated by users as credible.

Nose "GPS" lets us navigate by smell

0% credibility
 
Related

Oscars 2016: Leonardo DiCaprio wins best actor for The Revenant

P45
482 points

Facebook rolls out expanded Like button reactions around the world

P45
460 points



Most recent

Uno de mis mayores amores se llama Paulaner

NOTICIAS-ETF
16 points

Consulta y colaboración: La base para el desarrollo turístico de Bogotá

Comunicaciones
44 points

La vacuna contra algunos tipos de cáncer, cada vez más cerca

NOTICIAS-ETF
40 points

Stay Q Cleaning elimina molestias de limpieza para huéspedes

Comunicaciones
10 points

Tasas bajas y ajustes a modelo de preasignación de vivienda prioritaria reactivarían el sector: Grup

Patricia Amaya Comunicaciones
10 points

El colchón ortopédico, elemento clave para la salud de perros y gatos

Luisa Fernanda Rozo
18 points

¿Beneficiaría la nueva Ley de Ciberresiliencia de la Unión Europea a los consumidores colombianos?

Ciberseguridad
12 points

Hankook Tire Colombia nombra a nuevo Gerente General

Tecnologia
10 points

FRENTE A UNA DEMOLICIÓN EN CURSO NO HAY TIEMPO DE RAZONAR

Octavio Cruz Gonzalez
12 points

Principales trámites de una herencia que debes conocer

MaríaGeek
14 points
SHARE
TWEET
Like homing pigeons, people have a nose for navigation that lets us use our sense of smell to identify things, and to get around, as well.

Nose "GPS" lets us navigate by smell

Our brains are wired to convert smells into spatial information, say researchers. While humans may lack the scent-tracking sophistication of, say, a search-and-rescue dog, we can sniff our way, blindfolded, toward a location whose scent we’ve smelled only once before, the new study shows.

Similar investigations have taken place with birds and rodents, but this is the first time researchers have field-tested smell-based navigation with humans. The results indicate we have a “olfactory positioning system”—something like a built-in GPS.

“What we’ve found is that humans have the capability to orient ourselves along highways of odors and crisscross landscapes using only our sense of smell,” says Lucia Jacobs, professor of psychology at University of California, Berkeley, and lead author of the study in PLOS ONE.

OLFACTION ORIENTATION
Smell is a primitive sense that our early ancestors used for foraging, hunting and mating, among other skills necessary for survival. Early sailors and aviators gave anecdotal reports of using odors to navigate, but there have been no experiential scientific studies on this until now.

The process of smelling, or olfaction, is triggered by odor molecules traveling up the nasal passage, where they are identified by receptors that send signals to the olfactory bulb—which sits between the nasal cavity and the brain’s frontal lobe—and processes the information.

A key to the connection between smell, memory and navigation is that olfactory bulbs have a strong neural link to the brain’s hippocampus, which creates spatial maps of our environment.

“Olfaction is like this background fabric to our world that we might not be conscious of, but we are using it to stay oriented,” Jacobs says. “We may not see a eucalyptus grove as we pass it at night, but our brain is encoding the smells and creating a map.”

‘SMELLSCAPE’ NAVIGATION
Pigeons and rats, for example, are known to orient themselves using odor maps, or “smellscapes,” but sighted humans rely more heavily on visual landmarks, and so the study turned up some surprising results.

Two dozen young adults were tested on orientation and navigation tasks under various scenarios in which their hearing, sight, or smell was blocked. The test location was a 25-by-20-foot room where 32 containers with sponges were placed at points around the edge of the room. Two of the sponges were infused with essential oils such as sweet birch, anise, or clove.

In the smell-only experiment, participants were led, one at a time, into the room wearing blindfolds, earplugs, and headphones and walked in circles for disorientation purposes. They spent a minute at a specific point on the grid, where they inhaled a combination of two fragrances. After being walked in circles again for disorientation purposes, they were tasked with sniffing their way back to the starting point where they had smelled the two fragrances.

Overall, study participants navigated relatively closely to the targeted location when using only their sense of smell, compared to when other sensory inputs were blocked. Moreover, they were not just following one scent, but using information from both scents to orient themselves toward a point on an odor grid.

“We never thought humans could have a good enough sense of smell for this,” Jacobs says. But in retrospect, the results are “as obvious as the nose on my face.”

Fuente: www.futurity.org
WARNING: P45 made this note and was not rated by users as credible.
SHARE
TWEET
To comment you must log in with your account or sign up!
Featured content