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  4. Some like it, some do not: Behavioral responses and central processing of olfactory-trigeminal mixture perception
 
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2021
Journal Article
Title

Some like it, some do not: Behavioral responses and central processing of olfactory-trigeminal mixture perception

Abstract
Exploring the potential of eucalyptol as a masking agent for aversive odors, we found that eucalyptol masks the olfactory but not the trigeminal sensation of ammonia in a previous study. Here, we further investigate the processing of a mixture consisting of eucalyptol and ammonia, two olfactory-trigeminal stimuli. We presented the two pure odors and a mixture thereof to 33 healthy participants. The nostrils were stimulated alternately (monorhinal application). We analyzed the behavioral ratings (intensity and pleasantness) and functional brain images. First, we replicated our previous finding that, within the mixture, the eucalyptol component suppressed the olfactory intensity of the ammonia component. Second, mixture pleasantness was rated differently by participants depending on which component dominated their mixture perception. Approximately half of the volunteers rated the eucalyptol component as more intense and evaluated the mixture as pleasant (pleasant group). The other half rated the ammonia component as more intense and evaluated the mixture as unpleasant (unpleasant group). Third, these individual differences were also found in functional imaging data. Contrasting the mixture either to eucalyptol or to both single odors, neural activation was found in the unpleasant group only. Activation in the anterior insula and SII was interpreted as evidence for an attentional shift towards the potentially threatening mixture component ammonia and for trigeminal enhancement. In addition to insula and SII, further regions of the pain matrix were involved when assessing all participant responses to the mixture. Both a painful sensation and an attentional shift towards the unpleasant mixture component complicates the development of an efficient mask because a pleasant perception is an important requirement for malodor coverage.
Author(s)
Müschenich, Franziska S.
Sichtermann, Thorsten
Francesco, Maria Elisa di
Rodriguez-Raecke, Rea
Heim, Lennart
Singer, Marco
Wiesmann, Martin
Freiherr, Jessica
Fraunhofer-Institut für Verfahrenstechnik und Verpackung IVV  
Journal
Brain structure & function  
Open Access
DOI
10.1007/s00429-020-02178-4
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Verfahrenstechnik und Verpackung IVV  
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