Anxiety stinks! Stress may not only make you smell bad, but also the world around you, a new study suggests.
The study shows that when people are anxious, smells they once found neutral become distasteful.
Scientists using powerful new brain imaging technologies have revealed how anxiety or stress can rewire the brain, linking centers of emotion and olfactory processing, to make typically benign smells malodorous.
the brains of human subjects experience anxiety induced by
disturbing pictures and text of things like car crashes and
war transform neutral odours to distasteful ones, fuelling a
feedback loop that could heighten distress and lead to clinical issues like anxiety and depression.
The finding is important because it may help scientists
understand the dynamic nature of smell perception and the
biology of anxiety as the brain rewires itself under stressful
circumstances and reinforces negative sensations and feelings.
"After anxiety induction, neutral smells become clearly negative," said Li.
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"People experiencing an increase in anxiety show a decrease in the perceived pleasantness of odours. It becomes more negative as anxiety increases," Li said.Using behavioural techniques and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), Li's group looked at the brains of a dozen human subjects with induced anxiety as they processed known neutral odours.
Functional MRI is a technology that enables clinicians and researchers to observe the working brain in action.
In the course of the experiment, researchers observed that two distinct and typically independent circuits of the brain- one dedicated to olfactory processing, the other to emotion- become intimately intertwined under conditions of anxiety.
- Unknown Updated at: Monday, September 30, 2013
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