4.4 Review

Spatial information from the odour environment in mammalian olfaction

Journal

CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH
Volume 383, Issue 1, Pages 473-483

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00441-020-03395-3

Keywords

Spatial information; Odour; Mammalian olfaction; Odour plumes

Categories

Funding

  1. Francis Crick Institute from Cancer Research UK [FC001153]
  2. UK Medical Research Council [FC001153]
  3. Wellcome Trust [FC001153]
  4. Wellcome Trust Investigator grant [110174/Z/15/Z]
  5. NeuroNex program From Odor to Action
  6. BIF doctoral fellowship
  7. DFG postdoctoral fellowship
  8. Wellcome Trust [110174/Z/15/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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The sense of smell plays a crucial role in providing information about the environment for many species, particularly nocturnal and crepuscular mammals. Recent research has focused on how mammals extract spatial information through the olfactory system, including trail tracking, plume tracking, and olfactory-guided navigation. Technological advancements have brought attention to the spatiotemporal aspects of mammalian olfaction, revealing both promising developments and limitations in understanding how mammals gather spatial information from the odor environment.
The sense of smell is an essential modality for many species, in particular nocturnal and crepuscular mammals, to gather information about their environment. Olfactory cues provide information over a large range of distances, allowing behaviours ranging from simple detection and recognition of objects, to tracking trails and navigating using odour plumes from afar. In this review, we discuss the features of the natural olfactory environment and provide a brief overview of how odour information can be sampled and might be represented and processed by the mammalian olfactory system. Finally, we discuss recent behavioural approaches that address how mammals extract spatial information from the environment in three different contexts: odour trail tracking, odour plume tracking and, more general, olfactory-guided navigation. Recent technological developments have seen the spatiotemporal aspect of mammalian olfaction gain significant attention, and we discuss both the promising aspects of rapidly developing paradigms and stimulus control technologies as well as their limitations. We conclude that, while still in its beginnings, research on the odour environment offers an entry point into understanding the mechanisms how mammals extract information about space.

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