Brain activation during odor perception in males and females
- 1 July 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in NeuroReport
- Vol. 12 (9) , 2027-2033
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001756-200107030-00048
Abstract
Several studies indicate that women outperform men in olfactory identification tasks. The psychophysical data are more divergent when it comes to gender differences at levels of odor processing which are cognitively less demanding. We therefore compared cerebral activation with H2 15O PET in 12 females and 11 males during birhinal passive smelling of odors and odorless air. The odorous compounds (odorants) were pure olfactory, or mixed olfactory and weakly trigeminal. Using odorless air as the baseline condition, activations were found bilaterally in the amygdala, piriform and insular cortices in both sexes, irrespective of the odor. No gender difference was detected in the pattern of cerebral activation (random effect analysis SPM99, corrected p < 0.05) or in the subjective perception of odors. Males and females seem to use similar cerebral circuits during the passive perception of odors. The reported female superiority in assessing olfactory information including odor identification is probably an effect of a difference at a cognitive, rather than perceptive level of olfactory processing.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sex differences in the distribution of androgen receptors in the human hypothalamusJournal of Comparative Neurology, 2000
- Olfactory Functions Are Mediated by Parallel and Hierarchical ProcessingNeuron, 2000
- Affective aggression in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy: A quantitative MRI study of the amygdalaBrain, 2000
- Functional Anatomy of Perceptual and Semantic Processing for OdorsJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1999
- Sniffing and smelling: separate subsystems in the human olfactory cortexNature, 1998
- Emotion, olfaction, and the human amygdala: Amygdala activation during aversive olfactory stimulationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- A sex difference in the human brain and its relation to transsexualityNature, 1995
- Gender differences in long-term odor recognition memory: verbal versus sensory influences and the consistency of label useChemical Senses, 1993
- Functional localization and lateralization of human olfactory cortexNature, 1992
- Odor identification by males and females: predictions vs performanceChemical Senses, 1982