Smell, Matthew Cobb
Smell, Matthew Cobb
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Smell
A Very Short Introduction

Author: Matthew Cobb

Narrator: Dennis Kleinman

Unabridged: 3 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/31/2020


Synopsis

Our sense of smell—or olfaction as it is technically known—is our most enigmatic sense. It can conjure up memories, taking us back to very specific places and emotions, whilst powerful smells can induce strong feelings of hunger or nausea. In the animal kingdom smell can be used to find food, a mate, or a home; to sense danger; and to send and receive complex messages with other members of a species. Yet despite its fundamental importance in our mental life and in the existence of all animals, our scientific understanding of how smell works is limited.

In this Very Short Introduction, Matthew Cobb describes the latest scientific research on smell in humans and other mammals, in insects, and even in fish. He looks at how smell evolved, how animals use it to navigate and communicate, and disorders of smell in humans. Understanding smell, especially its neurobiology, has proved a big challenge, but olfactory science has revealed genetic factors that determine what we can and cannot smell, and why some people like a given smell while others find it unbearable. He ends by considering future treatments for smell disorders, and speculating on the role of smell in a world of robots.

About Matthew Cobb

Matthew Cobb is the author of several books, including The Resistance: The French Fight Against the Nazis, The Egg & Sperm Race: The Seventeenth Century Scientists who Unraveled the Secrets of Sex, Life, and Growth, and Eleven Days in August: The Liberation of Paris, August 1944. He is also the translator of Michel Morange's History of Molecular Biology. He is a professor of zoology at the University of Manchester, where he works on insects and on the history of science. Matthew lives in Manchester, England.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Srijan

Smelt of dense, solid, decades long research based acumen. ' Due to a rich blend of myriad smelly anecdotes within 'A Very' constrained platform I had a bad case nose-indigestion. Happy reading.......more

Goodreads review by Nilendu

How does about 500 distinct “olfactory reception” molecules could potentially help us perceive may be a billion distinct smell? Why smell was the “first” sense and why do we keep losing it (technically, tolerate more pseudogenes among the gebes that code for the proteins making 500 or so molecules)?......more

Goodreads review by Jason

Solid book, one of the much better Very Short Introductions I've read. Goes through a number of different aspects of smell - some are very heady, some are more down-to-earth. I appreciated the biological aspects of smell most but the human-centered portion was also very interesting.......more

Goodreads review by avinash

A detail memoir of the sense that is frequently overshadowed by sight, atleast in humans, smell. It’s a great read about something that we tend to use everyday but often doesn’t give the praise that it deserves. It felt like reading a scientific paper in laymen terms, insightful and interesting. Som......more