최근 글 목록
-
- kary mullis
- olfactory
- 2008
-
- Scent of strawberry
- olfactory
- 2008
-
- ACDLABS 11.0
- olfactory
- 2008
-
- Scent of Strawberry
- olfactory
- 2008
-
- The Good Scents Company
- olfactory
- 2008
8개의 게시물을 찾았습니다.
Esters
Methyl Acetate
Ethyl Acetate
Methyl Butanoate
Ethyl Butanoate
Ethyl-2-Methyl Butanoate
Ethyl-3-Methyl Butanoate
3-Methyl Butyl Acetate
Methyl Hexanoate
Ethyl Hexanoate
Hexyl Acetate
(E)-2-Hexenyl Acetate
Ethyl Octanoate
Aldehydes
Hexanal
Acids
Acetic Acid
Alcohols
(Z)-3-Hexenol
(E)-2-Hexenol
Hexyl Alcohol
Ketones
2-Pentanone
3-Hydroxy-2-Butanone
Hydrocarbons
Limonene
γ-Terpinene
Sulfur-Containing Compounds
s-Methyl Thioacetate
Dimethyl Disulfide
Furans
Furaneol
Lactones
γ-Dodecalactone
Ethyl Formate
Ethyl Butyrate
Methyl Ethyl Ketone
Ethyl Alcohol
Aldehyde C-6 (Hexanal)
Methyl Amyl Ketone
2-Methylthio Acetaldehyde
Methyl Heptyl Ketone
Aldehyde C-9 (Nonanal)
Acetic Acid
Ethyl Octanoate
2-Ethyl Hexanol
Aldehyde C-10 (Decanal)
Alcohol C-8 (Octanol)
Methyl Octanoate
Methyl Nonyl Ketone
Butyric Acid
Methyl Benzoate
Ethyl Hexanoate
Furfuryl Alcohol
Isovaleric Acid
Valeric Acid
Alcohol C-10 (Decanol)
Methyl Laureate
Methyl Undecyl Ketone
Ethyl Laureate
Dimethyl Sulfone
Heptanoic Acid
δ-Octalactone
Alcohol C-12
(Dodecanol, Lauryl Alcohol)
Methyl Myristate
Methyl Tridecyl Ketone
Hexanoic Acid
δ-Nonalactone
Nonanoic Acid
δ-Decalactone
Octanoic Acid
δ-Undecalactone
γ-Dodecalactone
δ-Dodecalactone
Indole
Lauric Acid
Skatole
Myristic Acid

Smelling in Color: A Rainbow of Possibilities
|
|
|||||
| - Full (PDF) - Related EHP Articles - PubMed:Related Articles - PubMed:Citation - Cited in PMC - Purchase This Issue |
|||||
|
|
http://www.senseofsmell.org/feature/smell101/lesson1/01.php
| |
![]() |
||||
|
Whether for finding food, avoiding predators or choosing a mate, the sense of smell is critical for the existence of almost all creatures. We humans, able to distinguish over 10,000 different odor molecules, utilize our sense of smell for a multitude of activities from enjoying the aroma of freshly brewed coffee to deciding whom not to sit next to on the bus. In the last 15 years scientists have made great advances to our understanding of how our nose detects odor molecules and our brain processes the resulting information that gives rise to the sensation of smell.
Every time we inhale, currents of air swirl up through the nostrils, over the bony turbinates, to a “sheet” about the size of a small postage stamp that contains millions of olfactory receptor neurons. This is the olfactory epithelium.
Each of the millions of olfactory neurons has minuscule filaments (cilia) extending from its knob. This knob is located at the tip of the olfactory neuron and the cilia project from the knob directly into the atmosphere. This is the only part of the brain that projects into the atmosphere. The cilia contain olfactory receptors, specialized proteins that bind low molecular weight molecules (odorants). One of the big breakthroughs of the past 15 years was the discovery by L. Buck and R. Axel of a large multi-gene family that encode for these olfactory receptors. Each receptor has a pocket (binding site) that is just the right shape to bind either a specific molecule or a group of structurally similar molecules. The interaction of the right molecule with the right receptor causes the receptor to change its shape (structural conformation). This conformational change gives rise to an electrical signal that goes first to the olfactory bulb and then to the areas of the brain that convert the electrical signal to a smell. In 1996, Peter Mombaerts found that olfactory neurons containing the same olfactory receptor, while randomly scattered within one of four spatial zones of the olfactory epithelium, project to only two specific areas (glomeruli) in the olfactory bulb. These findings suggest that the bulb transfers information that is broadly distributed in the olfactory epithelium into a highly organized information map that is in essence a map of the information provided by the different olfactory receptors. Systematic studies have shown that different odorants are represented by distinct spatial activity patterns in the glomerular layer of the olfactory bulb. These results in turn suggest a combinatorial mechanism for olfactory coding wherein the responses of olfactory receptors to odorants produce spatial patterns of olfactory bulb activity that are characteristic for a given odorant or blend of odorants, e.g. a perfume. Thus, it appears that these spatial patterns of activity create the information that leads to recognition of odor quality and intensity and discrimination between odors. This information is processed at higher levels of the olfactory system and in the brain giving rise to the perception of smell. |


Title : The noses sniff at you
Concept : If a person passes by the monitor, webcam catches the motion and sends to the information to a computer, the computer let the 3D nose turn to the person and sniff with sniff sound. If possible, color changes(green to red).
Process : 1. 3D nose modelling - maya
2. animation - maya
3. coding - x file
4. test
5. show
needs : webcam, monitor(size....?), computer


artificial olfactory bulb - sexual desire, desire to eat
artificial vomeronasal organ
- Limbic system : reproduction, surviving (emotion, smell...)
- New way of communication
- Logic :

최근 댓글 목록