Smellosophy, A.S. Barwich
Smellosophy, A.S. Barwich
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Smellosophy
What the Nose Tells the Mind

Author: A.S. Barwich

Narrator: Chloe Cannon

Unabridged: 10 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 07/14/2020


Synopsis

A pioneering exploration of olfaction that upsets settled notions of how the brain translates sensory information.

Decades of cognition research have shown that external stimuli "spark" neural patterns in particular regions of the brain. This has fostered a view of the brain as a space that we can map: here the brain responds to faces, there it perceives a sensation in your left hand. But it turns out that the sense of smell—only recently attracting broader attention in neuroscience—doesn't work this way. A. S. Barwich asks a deceptively simple question: What does the nose tell the brain, and how does the brain understand it?

Barwich interviews experts in neuroscience, psychology, chemistry, and perfumery in an effort to understand the biological mechanics and myriad meanings of odors. She argues that it is time to stop recycling ideas based on the paradigm of vision for the olfactory system. Scents are often fickle and boundless in comparison with visual images, and they do not line up with well-defined neural regions. Although olfaction remains a puzzle, Barwich proposes that what we know suggests the brain acts not only like a map but also as a measuring device, one that senses and processes simple and complex odors.

About A.S. Barwich

A. S. Barwich is an assistant professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science and Cognitive Science Program at Indiana University Bloomington. She has been a Presidential Scholar in Society and Neuroscience at Columbia University's Center for Science and Society and has held a Research Fellowship at the Konrad Lorenz Institute for Evolution and Cognition Research in Vienna. Her website is www.smellosophy.com.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Stephen

Leave it to a scientist/philosopher to write a book plumbing the workings of one of our senses, and produce a book stripped of every last vestige of sensuality. I'll grant, it's thoroughly argued that the methods brain scientists have used to define and understand smell have been shoddy, lacking in......more

Goodreads review by Parul

What a rich and fascinating subject. I was very excited about reading this book but unfortunately cannot offer a higher rating because I found so much of the content to be inaccessible to a layperson. If the author set out to write a popular science book, she did not do justice to the mission. If it......more

Goodreads review by Sheila

A highly technical discussion of odours, the reception of smells and how the brain detects, analyses and recognises complex smells. The author frequently draws analogies with sight, sound and other senses. There are also analogies with the olfactory system in both other animals and insects. The best......more

Goodreads review by Paul

I liked this book, and I think probably it doesn't deserve to have as low a rating as it has on Goodreads, but I don't think it's the most well-put-together example of what this could be. The main theses of the book were a bit hard to tease out from some of the very detailed information about experi......more