Rats Direct Inhalations for Smell Focus论文

  Imagine if you could focus your nose, the way you focus your eyes。 Scientists now believe that animals with a highly developed sense of smell, like rats and dogs, do just that。

  Similar to the way we taste sweet, salty, sour and bitter on different parts of the tongue, animals detect various smells in different parts of the nose。 Researchers at the University of Chicago hypothesized that rats, by changing the way air flows across the insides of the nostrils, could direct the scent to the nasal region where it could be best detected。

  Turns out they were right。 When presented with different odors, rats actually changed the way they sniffed。 For example, long slow sniffs for hard to detect scents, or short fast ones for easy ones。

  Rats even sniffed differently while learning a new scent than when the smell was familiar。 The study is in the Journal of Neuroscience。

  [Daniel Rojas—Libano and Leslie M。 Kay, Interplay between Sniffing and Odorant Sorptive Properties in the Rat]

  The researchers say the finding shows that there’s more to a good sense of smell than originally thought。 A sensitive nose is important, but so is how you use it。

  —Gretchen Cuda Kroen

展开阅读全文

页面更新:2024-05-11

标签:论文

1 2 3 4 5

上滑加载更多 ↓
推荐阅读:
友情链接:
更多:

本站资料均由网友自行发布提供,仅用于学习交流。如有版权问题,请与我联系,QQ:4156828  

© CopyRight 2008-2024 All Rights Reserved. Powered By bs178.com 闽ICP备11008920号-3
闽公网安备35020302034844号

Top