How do we smell? - Rose Eveleth

1,682,201 views ・ 2013-12-19

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
It's the first sense you use when you're born.
0
7040
2624
00:09
One out of every fifty of your genes is dedicated to it.
1
9688
3167
00:12
It must be important, right?
2
12879
1706
00:14
Okay, take a deep breath through your nose.
3
14609
2617
00:17
It's your sense of smell,
4
17250
1509
00:18
and it's breathtakingly powerful.
5
18783
1896
00:20
As an adult, you can distinguish about 10,000 different smells.
6
20703
3520
00:24
Here's how your nose does it.
7
24247
1486
00:25
Smell starts when you sniff molecules from the air into your nostrils.
8
25757
3362
00:29
95% of your nasal cavity
9
29143
1679
00:30
is used just to filter that air before it hits your lungs.
10
30846
3135
00:34
But at the very back of your nose
11
34005
1572
00:35
is a region called the olfactory epithelium,
12
35601
2355
00:37
a little patch of skin that's key to everything you smell.
13
37980
2715
00:40
The olfactory epithelium has a layer of olfactory receptor cells,
14
40719
3198
00:43
special neurons that sense smells,
15
43941
1896
00:45
like the taste buds of your nose.
16
45861
1829
00:47
When odor molecules hit the back of your nose,
17
47714
2143
00:49
they get stuck in a layer of mucus covering the olfactory epithelium.
18
49881
3381
00:53
As they dissolve, they bind to the olfactory receptor cells,
19
53286
2810
00:56
which fire and send signals through the olfactory tract
20
56120
2644
00:58
up to your brain.
21
58788
1130
00:59
As a side note, you can tell a lot
22
59942
1659
01:01
about how good an animal's sense of smell is
23
61625
2062
01:03
by the size of its olfactory epithelium.
24
63711
2015
01:05
A dog's olfactory epithelium
25
65750
1335
01:07
is 20 times bigger than your puny human one.
26
67109
2370
01:09
But there's still a lot we don't know about this little patch of cells, too.
27
69503
3572
01:13
For example, our olfactory epithelium is pigmented,
28
73099
2395
01:15
and scientists don't really know why.
29
75518
2151
01:17
But how do you actually tell the difference between smells?
30
77693
2863
01:20
It turns out that your brain has
31
80580
1525
01:22
40 million different olfactory receptor neurons,
32
82129
2409
01:24
so odor A might trigger
33
84562
2476
01:27
neurons 3, 427, and 988,
34
87062
2772
01:29
and odor B might trigger
35
89858
2238
01:32
neurons 8, 76, and 2,496,678.
36
92120
4165
01:36
All of these different combinations
37
96309
1667
01:38
let you detect a staggeringly broad array of smells.
38
98000
2437
01:40
Olfactory neurons are always fresh and ready for action.
39
100461
2711
01:43
They're the only neuron in the body that gets replaced regularly,
40
103196
3076
01:46
every four to eight weeks.
41
106296
1330
01:47
Once they are triggered, the signal travels through a bundle
42
107650
2846
01:50
called the olfactory tract
43
110520
1254
01:51
to destinations all over your brain, making stops in the amygdala,
44
111798
3118
01:54
the thalamus, and the neocortex.
45
114940
1546
01:56
This is different from how sight and sound are processed.
46
116510
2686
01:59
Each of those signals goes first to a relay center
47
119220
2346
02:01
in the middle of the cerebral hemisphere
48
121590
1906
02:03
and then out to other regions of the brain.
49
123520
2016
02:05
But smell, because it evolved before most of your other senses,
50
125560
3016
02:08
takes a direct route to these different regions of the brain,
51
128600
2886
02:11
where it can trigger your fight-or-flight response,
52
131510
2461
02:13
help you recall memories, or make your mouth water.
53
133995
2480
02:16
But even though we've all got the same physiological set-up,
54
136499
2911
02:19
two nostrils and millions of olfactory neurons,
55
139434
2195
02:21
not everybody smells the same things.
56
141653
1781
02:23
One of the most famous examples of this
57
143458
1878
02:25
is the ability to smell so-called "asparagus pee."
58
145360
2445
02:27
For about a quarter of the population,
59
147829
1810
02:29
urinating after eating asparagus
60
149663
1563
02:31
means smelling a distinct odor.
61
151250
1832
02:33
The other 75% of us don't notice.
62
153106
2472
02:35
And this isn't the only case of smells differing from nose to nose.
63
155602
3260
02:38
For some people, the chemical androstenone smells like vanilla;
64
158886
3023
02:41
to others, it smells like sweaty urine,
65
161933
2149
02:44
which is unfortunate
66
164106
1024
02:45
because androstenone is commonly found in tasty things like pork.
67
165154
3412
02:48
So with the sweaty urine smellers in mind,
68
168590
2128
02:50
pork producers will castrate male pigs
69
170742
2217
02:52
to stop them from making androstenone.
70
172983
2038
02:55
The inability to smell a scent is called anosmia,
71
175045
2746
02:57
and there are about 100 known examples.
72
177815
1944
02:59
People with allicin anosmia can't smell garlic.
73
179783
3267
03:03
Those with eugenol anosmia can't smell cloves.
74
183074
2849
03:05
And some people can't smell anything
75
185947
2576
03:08
at all.
76
188547
1180
03:09
This kind of full anosmia could have several causes.
77
189751
2528
03:12
Some people are born without a sense of smell.
78
192303
2191
03:14
Others lose it after an accident or during an illness.
79
194518
3013
03:17
If the olfactory epithelium gets swollen or infected,
80
197555
2513
03:20
it can hamper your sense of smell,
81
200092
1620
03:21
something you might have experienced when you were sick.
82
201736
2715
03:24
Not being able to smell anything can mess with your other senses, too.
83
204475
3299
03:27
Many people who can't smell at all
84
207798
1627
03:29
also can't really taste the same way the rest of us do.
85
209449
2582
03:32
It turns out that how something tastes is closely related to how it smells.
86
212055
3866
03:35
As you chew your food, air is pushed up your nasal passage,
87
215945
2891
03:38
carrying with it the smell of your food.
88
218860
1985
03:40
Those scents hit your olfactory epithelium
89
220869
2078
03:42
and tell your brain a lot about what you're eating.
90
222971
2386
03:45
Without the ability to smell, you lose the ability to taste
91
225381
2780
03:48
anything more complicated than the five tastes
92
228185
2161
03:50
your taste buds can detect:
93
230370
1595
03:51
sweet, salty,
94
231989
1468
03:53
bitter, sour, and savory.
95
233481
1725
03:55
So, the next time you smell exhaust fumes,
96
235230
2000
03:57
salty sea air, or roast chicken,
97
237254
1694
03:58
you'll know exactly how you've done it
98
238972
1918
04:00
and, perhaps, be a little more thankful that you can.
99
240914
3003

Original video on YouTube.com
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7