The Force of Fragrance

A one-second sniff of something can whet your appetite, trigger a memory, change your mood, improve your health — even spark a shopping spree. Family First investigates the power of our olfactory organs.

The    Force    of    Fragrance

As I glumly plough through my usually tasty garlic onion pizza I muse on the irony of writing an article about the sense of smell precisely when a nasty cold has left me without it! If the lack of it can turn even my pungent garlic onion pizza into a tasteless piece of cardboard it tells us something about the strength of our sense of smell.

 

The Anatomy of a Nose

Why is our sense of smell so powerful? If a specialist were to give you a peek inside a body you could see exactly why a simple odor can trigger a memory or an emotional response.

The olfactory nerve where our sense of smell is located leads straight to the hippocampus the part of the brain that processes memory. There is an almost direct line to the emotional area of our brains too: Just two nerve synapses separate the olfactory nerve from the amygdala which regulates feelings. The pathways to the other senses are by comparison much longer.

Research supports this finding showing that our “smell memories” actually go back further than memories associated with other senses. Studies conducted on elders have shown that visual recall usually goes back to between the ages of fifteen and thirty but smell-associated memory goes back much further to early childhood (ages five to ten).

Continue reading with Mishpacha.

Create a free account to keep reading.

Everything you need to stay close to Mishpacha.