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Odor Lateralization and Spatial Localization: Null Effects of Blindness

Overview
Publisher Springer
Specialties Psychiatry
Psychology
Date 2019 Apr 18
PMID 30993657
Citations 2
Authors
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Abstract

People can navigate through an environment using different sensory information, including olfactory cues. Correct intranasal localization and external location of odors can be learned, and some people are able to lateralize olfactory stimuli above chance, which raises the question: What determines the spectrum of olfactory localization abilities. Here, we explored whether odor lateralization and localization abilities are increased in the course of sensory compensation. In a series of studies, we combined two different aspects of odor localization. Study 1 compared abilities of 69 blind people (M = 41 ± 1.6 years; 32 females) and 45 sighted controls (M = 38.3 ± 2.1 years; 25 females) to correctly lateralize eucalyptol, an odorant with a strong trigeminal component, presented to either nostril. Studies 2 and 3 involved a more ecologically valid task, namely spatial localization of olfactory stimuli. In Study 2, 13 blind individuals (M = 28.5 ± 3.5 years; seven females) and 16 sighted controls (M = 34.9 ± 3.2 years; ten females) tried to localize a single odorant, while in Study 3, 97 blind individuals (M = 43.1 ± .5 years; 48 females) and 47 sighted controls (M = 38.7 ± .7 years; 27 females) attempted to localize a single target odor in an experimental olfactory space comprising four different odorants. Blind and sighted subjects did not differ in their abilities to lateralize and to localize odors, and their performance across all tasks suggests that odor lateralization and localization are important for navigation in an environment regardless of visual status.

Citing Articles

Enhanced Odorant Localization Abilities in Congenitally Blind but not in Late-Blind Individuals.

Manescu S, Chouinard-Leclaire C, Collignon O, Lepore F, Frasnelli J Chem Senses. 2020; 46.

PMID: 33140091 PMC: 7909301. DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bjaa073.


Humans navigate with stereo olfaction.

Wu Y, Chen K, Ye Y, Zhang T, Zhou W Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020; 117(27):16065-16071.

PMID: 32571945 PMC: 7355004. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2004642117.

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