Authors
Donald A Wilson, Richard J Stevenson
Publication date
2003/5/1
Source
Trends in neurosciences
Volume
26
Issue
5
Pages
243-247
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Current emphasis on odorant physiochemical features as the basis for perception largely ignores the synthetic and experience-dependent nature of olfaction. Olfaction is synthetic, as mammals have only limited ability to identify elements within even simple odor mixtures. Furthermore, olfaction is experience-bound, as exposure alone can significantly affect the extent to which stimuli can be discriminated. We propose that early analytical processing of odors is inaccessible at the behavioral level and that all odors are initially encoded as ‘objects' in the piriform cortex. Moreover, we suggest that odor perception is wholly dependent on the integrity of this memory system and that its loss severely impairs normal perception.
Total citations
200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202461217331716151524121421101611818132110173
Scholar articles