نتایج جستجو برای: smell discrimination in different animals

تعداد نتایج: 17123791  

2017
Alessandra B. Fioretti Marco Fusetti Alberto Eibenstein

Loss of olfactory function starts at 60 years and become significantly worse after 70. In many cases olfactory disorders may be a consequence of a disease. Different types of olfactory deficit may be revealed by smell evaluation. Anosmia is defined as inability to perceive all odors (total) or some odors (partial). Hyposmia or microsmia is a decreased sensitivity to odors. Dysosmia is a distort...

Journal: :Behavioural brain research 1994
P R Hunt N Neave C Shaw J P Aggleton

Rats with lesions in either the fornix or the thalamic nucleus medialis dorsalis were unimpaired on the acquisition of two object discrimination tasks. The same animals were then tested on a concurrent learning task in which various object discriminations were presented at different rates during the same session. This arrangement was primarily designed to minimise any response bias effects. Ani...

Journal: :Psychological science 2012
Yael Asen Robert G Cook

Recognizing and categorizing behavior is essential for animals (e.g., during mate selection, courtship, and avoidance of predators). In a study examining if and how animals classify different actions, a go/no-go procedure was used to train 4 pigeons to discriminate among "walking" and "running" digital animal models (each portrayed from 12 different viewpoints). Action discrimination acquired f...

2014
Ilona Croy Selda Olgun Laura Mueller Anna Schmidt Marcus Muench Guenter Gisselmann Hanns Hatt

It is known that both smell and taste functions decrease with aging. However, some clinical questions remain, such as the independence of each sensation loss and the correlation between a person’s actual sensory loss and awareness of the loss. In this research, we investigated both the olfactory and taste functions of aged subjects together with their awareness of sensation loss. Effects of ana...

Journal: :The Laryngoscope 2015
Aytug Altundag Melih Cayonu Gurkan Kayabasoglu Murat Salihoglu Hakan Tekeli Omer Saglam Thomas Hummel

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS Patients with olfactory dysfunction benefit from repeated exposure to odors, so-called olfactory training (OT). This does not mean occasional smelling but the structured sniffing of a defined set of odors, twice daily, for a period of 4 months or longer. In this prospective study, we investigated whether the effect of OT might increase through the use of more odors and ext...

Journal: :Neuroscience 2014
G. E. Fenton D. M. Halliday R. Mason C. W. Stevenson

Associative learning is encoded under anesthesia and involves the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Neuronal activity in mPFC increases in response to a conditioned stimulus (CS+) previously paired with an unconditioned stimulus (US) but not during presentation of an unpaired stimulus (CS-) in anesthetized animals. Studies in conscious animals have shown dissociable roles for different mPFC subr...

Journal: :Frontiers in psychology 2015
Anne-Claude Luisier Genevieve Petitpierre Camille Ferdenzi Annick Clerc Bérod Agnes Giboreau Catherine Rouby Moustafa Bensafi

Atypical sensory functioning in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) has been well documented in the last decade for the visual, tactile and auditory systems, but olfaction in ASD is still understudied. The aim of the present study was to examine whether children with ASD and neuro-typically (NT) developed children differed in odor perception, at the cognitive (familiarity and identification ability)...

2015
Francesca Frati Silvana Piersanti Eric Conti Manuela Rebora Gianandrea Salerno Joseph Clifton Dickens

In polymorphic damselflies discrimination of females from males is complex owing to the presence of androchrome and gynochrome females. To date there is no evidence that damselflies use sensory modalities other than vision (and tactile stimuli) in mate searching and sex recognition. The results of the present behavioural and electrophysiological investigations on Ischnura elegans, a polymorphic...

2014
Emmanuelle Courtiol Laura Lefèvre Samuel Garcia Marc Thévenet Belkacem Messaoudi Nathalie Buonviso

A growing body of evidence suggests that sniffing is not only the mode of delivery for odorant molecules but also contributes to olfactory perception. However, the precise role of sniffing variations remains unknown. The zonation hypothesis suggests that animals use sniffing variations to optimize the deposition of odorant molecules on the most receptive areas of the olfactory epithelium (OE). ...

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