Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • female (1)
  • humans (1)
  • odor (2)
  • percepts (1)
  • smell (1)
  • visual cortex (4)
  • visual functions (1)
  • young adult (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    When attempting to identify an object based on smell alone, people often visualize the perceived source of the odorant. This close association between olfactory and visual functions is supported by neuroimaging studies demonstrating activation of visual cortex during performance of purely olfactory tasks. Such activation might simply reflect the correlation between olfactory percepts and the corresponding visual images, or it might reflect a causal contribution of visual processing to olfactory perception. Here we provide evidence in support of the latter possibility. Using repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, we show that stimulating human visual cortex improves performance on a task requiring discrimination among different odor qualities. No significant improvement is found for tasks involving discrimination between intensities of the same odor, from stimulation of auditory cortex, or from "sham" stimulation. These results are thus consistent with a specific visual cortical influence on high-level olfactory perception. They also demonstrate that unimodal perceptual tasks are influenced by processing within cortical areas of other, seemingly unrelated, sensory systems.

    Citation

    Jahan B Jadauji, Jelena Djordjevic, Johan N Lundström, Christopher C Pack. Modulation of olfactory perception by visual cortex stimulation. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. 2012 Feb 29;32(9):3095-100

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags


    PMID: 22378882

    View Full Text