In a single sniff, the human sense of smell can distinguish odors within a fraction of a second, working at a level of sensitivity that is “on par” with how our brains perceive color, “refuting the widely held belief that olfaction is our slow sense,” a new study finds.

The new findings challenge previous research in which the timing it took to discriminate between odor sequences was around 1,200 milliseconds, Dr. Dmitry Rinberg, a professor in the Department of Neuroscience and Physiology at NYU Langone Health in New York, wrote in an editorial accompanying the study in Nature Human Behaviour.

  • @fleabomber
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    71 day ago

    Perhaps whoever smelt it actually did dealt it.

    • Admiral PatrickOP
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      21 day ago

      Finally. Someone chiming in with the practical applications of this research lol.

  • @I_Fart_Glitter
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    21 day ago

    I am very bothered that the stock photo is someone smelling tulips, which have no smell.

  • @CaptainPedantic
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    22 days ago

    The article says that we can distinguish 2 different smells that appear 60 milliseconds apart.