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Although it is agreed that physicochemical features of molecules determine their perceived odor, the rules governing this relationship remain unknown. A significant obstacle to such understanding is the high dimensionality of features describing both percepts and molecules. We applied a statistical method to reduce dimensionality in both odor percepts and physicochemical descriptors for a large set of molecules. We found that the primary axis of perception was odor pleasantness, and critically, that the primary axis of physicochemical properties reflected the primary axis of olfactory perception. This allowed us to predict the pleasantness of novel molecules by their physicochemical properties alone. Olfactory perception is strongly shaped by experience and learning. However, our findings suggest that olfactory pleasantness is also partially innate, corresponding to a natural axis of maximal discriminability among biologically relevant molecules.
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Rehan M Khan
Virginia Commonwealth University
Chung-Hay Luk
University of California, Berkeley
Adeen Flinker
City University of New York
Journal of Neuroscience
University of California, Berkeley
Weizmann Institute of Science
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Khan et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a20d4e110699ec7be2a9d2f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1158-07.2007
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