Individual odor hedonic perception is coded in temporal joint network activity
Adult
Male
0301 basic medicine
Adolescent
Functional connectivity analysis
Individuality
Brain
Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
Olfactory Perception
Olfaction
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Young Adult
03 medical and health sciences
Oxygen Consumption
Odorants
Humans
Female
Behavioral immune system
Nerve Net
RC321-571
DOI:
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117782
Publication Date:
2021-01-23T16:19:04Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
The human sense of smell is highly individual and characterized by a strong variability in the perception and evaluation of olfactory stimuli, depending on cultural imprint and current physiological conditions. Since this individual perspective has often been neglected in fMRI studies on olfactory hedonic coding, this study focuses on the neuronal activity and connectivity patterns resulting from subject-specific olfactory stimulation.Thirty-one normosmic participants took part in a fMRI block designed paradigm consisting of three olfactory stimulation sessions. The most pleasant and unpleasant odors were individually specified during a pre-test for each participant and validated in the main experiment. Mean activation and functional connectivity analysis focusing on the right and left piriform cortex were performed for the predefined olfactory regions-of-interest (ROIs) and compared between the three olfactory conditions.Individual unpleasant olfactory stimulation as compared to pleasant or neutral did not alter mean BOLD activation in the predefined olfactory ROIs but led to a change in connectivity pattern in the right piriform cortex.Our data suggests that the individual pleasantness of odors is not detectable by average BOLD magnitude changes in primary or secondary olfactory brain areas, but reflected in temporal patterns of joint activation that create a network between the right piriform cortex, the left insular cortex, the orbitofrontal cortex, and the precentral gyrus. This network may serve the evolutionary defense mechanism of olfaction by preparing goal-directed action.
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