Order of exposure to pleasant and unpleasant odors affects autonomic nervous system response
Autor: | Toshihiro Nakashima, Katsuya Nagai, Yuko Horii |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
Male
Sympathetic Nervous System Time Factors Emotions Neuropsychological Tests Body Temperature Fight-or-flight response Random Allocation Behavioral Neuroscience Animals Autonomic Pathways Rats Wistar Autonomic nerve Relaxation (psychology) musculoskeletal neural and ocular physiology Vagus Nerve Parasympathetic nerve Olfactory Perception Rats Smell Autonomic nervous system Positive response Odor Odorants Psychology Temperature response Neuroscience psychological phenomena and processes |
Zdroj: | Behavioural Brain Research. 243:109-117 |
ISSN: | 0166-4328 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bbr.2012.12.042 |
Popis: | When mammals are exposed to an odor, that odor is expected to elicit a physiological response in the autonomic nervous system. An unpleasant aversive odor causes non-invasive stress, while a pleasant odor promotes healing and relaxation in mammals. We hypothesized that pleasant odors might reduce a stress response previously induced by an aversive predator odor. Rats were thus exposed to pleasant and unpleasant odors in different orders to determine whether the order of odor exposure had an effect on the physiological response in the autonomic nervous system. The first trial examined autonomic nerve activity via sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve response while the second trial examined body temperature response. Initial exposure to a pleasant odor elicited a positive response and secondary exposure to an unpleasant odor elicited a negative response, as expected. However, we found that while initial exposure to an unpleasant odor elicited a negative stress response, subsequent secondary exposure to a pleasant odor not only did not alleviate that negative response, but actually amplified it. These findings were consistent for both the autonomic nerve activity response trial and the body temperature response trial. The trial results suggest that exposure to specific odors does not necessarily result in the expected physiological response and that the specific order of exposure plays an important role. Our study should provide new insights into our understanding of the physiological response in the autonomic nervous system related to odor memory and discrimination and point to areas that require further research. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |