Some participants were able to discriminate order of smells at intervals 10 times shorter than previously thought
The human sense of smell is nothing to turn one’s nose up at, research suggests, with scientists revealing we are far more sensitive to the order of odours captured by a sniff than previously thought.
Charles Darwin is among those who have cast aspersions on our sense of smell, suggesting it to be “of extremely slight service” to humans, while scientists have long thought our olfactory abilities rather sluggish.
More Stories
Researchers create AI-based tool that restores age-damaged artworks in hours
Australia has ‘no alternative’ but to embrace AI and seek to be a world leader in the field, industry and science minister says
European journalists targeted with Paragon Solutions spyware, say researchers