Literature DB >> 23907763

A world without the olfactory dimension.

Marta Tafalla1.   

Abstract

This article aims to describe what is it like to perceive reality when suffering from congenital anosmia. Nevertheless, this objective entails a fundamental difficulty. Since I have never had the experience of olfaction, it seems natural to me to live in a world lacking the olfactory dimension; this subjective perception is the only one I know and in consequence it is difficult to describe. For this reason, in recent years I have begun to develop long conversations with other people suffering from congenital anosmia, people who have lost their sense of olfaction in adulthood and also people with a good sense of smell. My goal is to draw a map showing the principal differences that might allow us to develop a systematic comparison. Obviously, this is not an experimental or quantitative scientific procedure, but only a modest attempt to compare personal stories about subjective experiences. It is a philosophical-literary exercise, and does not aim to be anything other than that. But I hope it will help to formulate meaningful questions, which would then need a properly scientific approach. In the first part of this article I want to try to describe how I became aware that other people could smell; and in a second part, I will try to examine the consequences of anosmia in different areas of everyday life: nourishment, relationships with people, own body perception, natural or urban environments perception, time perception, and finally aesthetic appreciation and the implications of living in a world without stench.
Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aesthetic appreciation; anosmia; environment perception; nourishment; olfaction; perception; stench; time perception

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23907763     DOI: 10.1002/ar.22734

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anat Rec (Hoboken)        ISSN: 1932-8486            Impact factor:   2.064


  2 in total

1.  Greater addition of neurons to the olfactory bulb than to the cerebral cortex of eulipotyphlans but not rodents, afrotherians or primates.

Authors:  Pedro F M Ribeiro; Paul R Manger; Kenneth C Catania; Jon H Kaas; Suzana Herculano-Houzel
Journal:  Front Neuroanat       Date:  2014-04-11       Impact factor: 3.856

Review 2.  Scent in Motion: On the Multiple Uses of Ambient Scent in the Context of Passenger Transport.

Authors:  Charles Spence
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2021-07-12
  2 in total

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