How do we smell? - Rose Eveleth

1,690,200 views ・ 2013-12-19

TED-Ed


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

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It's the first sense you use when you're born.
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One out of every fifty of your genes is dedicated to it.
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It must be important, right?
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Okay, take a deep breath through your nose.
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It's your sense of smell,
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and it's breathtakingly powerful.
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As an adult, you can distinguish about 10,000 different smells.
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Here's how your nose does it.
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Smell starts when you sniff molecules from the air into your nostrils.
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95% of your nasal cavity
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is used just to filter that air before it hits your lungs.
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But at the very back of your nose
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is a region called the olfactory epithelium,
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a little patch of skin that's key to everything you smell.
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The olfactory epithelium has a layer of olfactory receptor cells,
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special neurons that sense smells,
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like the taste buds of your nose.
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When odor molecules hit the back of your nose,
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they get stuck in a layer of mucus covering the olfactory epithelium.
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As they dissolve, they bind to the olfactory receptor cells,
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which fire and send signals through the olfactory tract
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up to your brain.
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As a side note, you can tell a lot
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about how good an animal's sense of smell is
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by the size of its olfactory epithelium.
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A dog's olfactory epithelium
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is 20 times bigger than your puny human one.
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But there's still a lot we don't know about this little patch of cells, too.
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For example, our olfactory epithelium is pigmented,
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and scientists don't really know why.
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But how do you actually tell the difference between smells?
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It turns out that your brain has
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40 million different olfactory receptor neurons,
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so odor A might trigger
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neurons 3, 427, and 988,
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and odor B might trigger
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neurons 8, 76, and 2,496,678.
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All of these different combinations
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let you detect a staggeringly broad array of smells.
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Olfactory neurons are always fresh and ready for action.
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They're the only neuron in the body that gets replaced regularly,
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every four to eight weeks.
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Once they are triggered, the signal travels through a bundle
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called the olfactory tract
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to destinations all over your brain, making stops in the amygdala,
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the thalamus, and the neocortex.
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This is different from how sight and sound are processed.
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Each of those signals goes first to a relay center
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in the middle of the cerebral hemisphere
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and then out to other regions of the brain.
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But smell, because it evolved before most of your other senses,
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takes a direct route to these different regions of the brain,
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where it can trigger your fight-or-flight response,
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help you recall memories, or make your mouth water.
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But even though we've all got the same physiological set-up,
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two nostrils and millions of olfactory neurons,
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not everybody smells the same things.
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One of the most famous examples of this
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is the ability to smell so-called "asparagus pee."
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For about a quarter of the population,
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urinating after eating asparagus
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means smelling a distinct odor.
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The other 75% of us don't notice.
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And this isn't the only case of smells differing from nose to nose.
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For some people, the chemical androstenone smells like vanilla;
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to others, it smells like sweaty urine,
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which is unfortunate
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because androstenone is commonly found in tasty things like pork.
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So with the sweaty urine smellers in mind,
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pork producers will castrate male pigs
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to stop them from making androstenone.
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The inability to smell a scent is called anosmia,
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and there are about 100 known examples.
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People with allicin anosmia can't smell garlic.
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Those with eugenol anosmia can't smell cloves.
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And some people can't smell anything
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at all.
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This kind of full anosmia could have several causes.
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Some people are born without a sense of smell.
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Others lose it after an accident or during an illness.
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If the olfactory epithelium gets swollen or infected,
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it can hamper your sense of smell,
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something you might have experienced when you were sick.
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Not being able to smell anything can mess with your other senses, too.
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Many people who can't smell at all
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also can't really taste the same way the rest of us do.
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It turns out that how something tastes is closely related to how it smells.
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As you chew your food, air is pushed up your nasal passage,
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carrying with it the smell of your food.
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Those scents hit your olfactory epithelium
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and tell your brain a lot about what you're eating.
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Without the ability to smell, you lose the ability to taste
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anything more complicated than the five tastes
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your taste buds can detect:
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sweet, salty,
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bitter, sour, and savory.
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So, the next time you smell exhaust fumes,
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salty sea air, or roast chicken,
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you'll know exactly how you've done it
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and, perhaps, be a little more thankful that you can.
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