THE FEMALE NOSE ALWAYS KNOWS : DO WOMEN HAVE MORE OLFACTORY NEURONS
Individuals show great
diversity in their ability to identify scents and odors. More importantly,
males and females greatly differ in their perceptual evaluation of odors, with
women outperforming men on many kinds of smell tests.
Sex differences in
olfactory detection may play a role in differentiated social behaviors and may
be connected to one's perception of smell, which is naturally linked to
associated experiences and emotions. Thus, women's olfactory superiority has
been suggested to be cognitive or emotional, rather than perceptual.
Previous studies
investigating the biological roots of greater olfactory sensitivity in women
have used imaging methods that allow gross measures of brain structures. The
results of such studies have been controversial, leaving unanswered the
question of whether differences in olfactory sensitivity have biological roots
or whether they represent a mere by-product of social and cognitive differences
between genders.
The isotropic
fractionator, a fast and reliable technique previously developed by a group of
researchers at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, measures the absolute
number of cells in a given brain structure such as the olfactory bulb, which is
the first brain region to receive olfactory information captured by the
nostrils.
Using this technique,
a group of researchers led by Prof. Roberto Lent from the Institute of
Biomedical Sciences at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and the
National Institute of Translational Neuroscience, Ministry of Science and
Technology in Brazil, has finally found biological evidence in the brains of
men and women that may explain the olfactory difference between genders.
The group examined
post-mortem brains from seven men and 11 women who were all over the age of 55
at the time of death. All individuals were neurologically healthy and none
worked in professions requiring exceptional olfactory abilities, such as
coffee-tasting or professional cooking. By calculating the number of cells in
the olfactory bulbs of these individuals, the group (that also included
researchers from the University of São Paulo, the University of California, San
Francisco, and the Albert Einstein Hospital in São Paulo) discovered that women
have on average 43% more cells than men in this brain structure. Counting
neurons specifically, the difference reached almost 50% more in women than men.
The question remains
whether this higher cell number accounts for the differences in olfactory
sensitivity between sexes. "Generally speaking, says Prof. Lent, larger
brains with larger numbers of neurons correlate with the functional complexity
provided by these brains. Thus, it makes sense to think that more neurons in
the female olfactory bulbs would provide women with higher olfactory sensitivity."
The fact that few
cells are added to our brains throughout life suggests that women are already
born with these extra cells. But why do women's brains have this pre-wired
ability? What mechanisms are responsible for this higher number of cells in
their olfactory bulbs? Some believe this olfactory ability is essential for
reproductive behaviors such as pair bonding and kin recognition.
If this holds true,
then superior olfactory ability is an essential trait that has been inherited
and then maintained throughout evolution, an idea expressed by Romanian
playwright Eugene Ionesco when he said "a nose that can see is worth two
that sniff."
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