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Journal ArticleDOI

Olfactory sensitivity for aliphatic alcohols in squirrel monkeys and pigtail macaques.

TLDR
The results showed both primate species have a well-developed olfactory sensitivity for aliphatic ketones, and pigtail macaques generally perform better than squirrel monkeys in detecting members of this class of odorants.
Abstract
Using a conditioning paradigm, the olfactory sensitivity of three squirrel monkeys and three pigtail macaques for homologous series of aliphatic 2-ketones (2-butanone to 2-nonanone), symmetrical ketones (3-pentanone to 6-undecanone), and C7-ketones (2-heptanone to 4-heptanone) was assessed. In the majority of cases, the animals of both species significantly discriminated concentrations below 1 ppm from the odorless solvent, and with 2-nonanone and 5-nonanone the monkeys even demonstrated thresholds below 1 ppb. The results showed both primate species have a well-developed olfactory sensitivity for aliphatic ketones, and pigtail macaques generally perform better than squirrel monkeys in detecting members of this class of odorants. Further, in both species tested, we found a significant negative correlation between perceptibility in terms of olfactory detection thresholds and carbon-chain length of both the 2-ketones and the symmetrical ketones, but not between detection thresholds and position of the functional group with the C7-ketones. These findings lend further support to the growing body of evidence suggesting that between-species comparisons of the number of functional olfactory receptor genes or of neuroanatomical features are poor predictors of olfactory performance.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Poor human olfaction is a 19th-century myth

TL;DR: Genetic and neurobiological data that reveal features unique to the human olfactory system are regularly misinterpreted to underlie the putative microsmaty, and the impact of human Olfactory dysfunction is underappreciated in medical practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethanol, fruit ripening, and the historical origins of human alcoholism in primate frugivory.

TL;DR: Ethanol plumes can potentially be used to localize ripe fruit, and consumption of low-concentration ethanol within fruit may act as a feeding stimulant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fruits, Fingers, and Fermentation: The Sensory Cues Available to Foraging Primates

TL;DR: It is shown that softening texture also characterizes the fruit ripening process, and that color is of ambiguous importance to primates possessing trichromatic vision, and it is deduced that detecting and selecting fruits on the basis of cues other than color is a persistent theme in primate evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Humans as an Animal Model for Systems-Level Organization of Olfaction

TL;DR: An overview of the systems-level organization of olfaction is provided, highlighting results obtained from studying humans, whom the authors think provide an underutilized, yet critical, animal model for olf action.
Journal ArticleDOI

D'scent of man: a comparative survey of primate chemosignaling in relation to sex.

TL;DR: This review takes a comparative perspective to illustrate the reproductive context of primate signaling, the relevant information content of their signals, the sexually differentiated investigative responses generated, and the behavioral or physiological consequences of message transmission to both signaler and receiver.
References
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Book

CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics

TL;DR: CRC handbook of chemistry and physics, CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, CRC handbook as discussed by the authors, CRC Handbook for Chemistry and Physiology, CRC Handbook for Physics,
Book

Nonparametric statistics for the behavioral sciences

Sidney Siegel
TL;DR: This is the revision of the classic text in the field, adding two new chapters and thoroughly updating all others as discussed by the authors, and the original structure is retained, and the book continues to serve as a combined text/reference.
Journal ArticleDOI

A novel multigene family may encode odorant receptors: A molecular basis for odor recognition

TL;DR: This work has cloned and characterized 18 different members of an extremely large multigene family that encodes seven transmembrane domain proteins whose expression is restricted to the olfactory epithelium and is likely to encode a diverse family of odorant receptors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of olfactory discrimination : Converging evidence for common principles across phyla

TL;DR: The findings support the hypothesis that olfactory transduction and neural processing in the peripheral Olfactory pathway involve basic mechanisms that are universal across most species in most phyla.
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