Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6266932 Current Opinion in Neurobiology 2014 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Odors are important signs of threats and resources.•Odor valence is coded in the brain.•Specific areas code valence already in olfactory bulb and antennal lobe.•Coding of odor valence is more complicated in mouse than in fly.

Why are some odors perceived as pleasant while others are not? We review current research on how pleasant and unpleasant odors, that is, odors with positive or negative valence, are processed in the brain of flies and mice. We conclude that in mice pleasant and unpleasant odors are detected via three olfactory subsystems with only one being fully dedicated to unpleasant odors, while the others detect both good and bad odors. Correspondingly, so far no clear segmentation into regions processing exclusively pleasant or unpleasant odors has been identified in the mouse brain. The situation is different in flies, where most odors are sensed via the antenna. Already at the antennal lobe level, that is, the first processing center for olfactory input, odorants seem to be categorized as pleasant or unpleasant. We furthermore discuss why animals at all should make a decision based on olfaction, and why a straightforward and fast processing of odorant valence might be important for survival and reproduction.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Neuroscience (General)
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