Sniffing Longer rather than Stronger to Maintain Olfactory Detection Threshold

Air flow-rate is usually higher in one nostril in comparison to the other. Also, within bounds, higher nasal flow-rate improves odorant detection. It follows from the above that odorant detection should be better in the nostril with higher flow-rate in comparison to the nostril with lower flow-rate....

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemical senses 2000-02, Vol.25 (1), p.1-8
Hauptverfasser: Sobel, Noam, Khan, Rehan M., Hartley, Catherine A., Sullivan, Edith V., Gabrieli, John D.E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Air flow-rate is usually higher in one nostril in comparison to the other. Also, within bounds, higher nasal flow-rate improves odorant detection. It follows from the above that odorant detection should be better in the nostril with higher flow-rate in comparison to the nostril with lower flow-rate. Paradoxically, previous research has shown that odorant detection thresholds are equal for the high and low flow-rate nostrils. Here we resolve this apparent paradox by showing that when detecting through the nostril with lower air flow-rate, humans sniffed longer than when detecting through the nostril with higher air flow-rate, thus equalizing performance between the nostrils. When this compensatory mechanism was blocked, a pronounced advantage in odorant detection was seen for the nostril with higher air flow-rate over the nostril with lower air flow-rate. Finally, we show that normal birhinal sniff duration may enable only one nostril to reach optimal threshold. This finding implies that during each sniff, each nostril conveys to the brain a slightly different image of the olfactory world. It remains to be shown how the brain combines these images into a single olfactory percept.
ISSN:0379-864X
1464-3553
1464-3553
DOI:10.1093/chemse/25.1.1