How Do Smells Relate to Frequency Perception?

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The discussion centers on how humans perceive smell, with a focus on the interaction between chemical receptors in the nose and the brain. It clarifies that the process is chemical rather than vibrational, likening it to a "round pegs and round holes" analogy, indicating that specific molecules fit into specific receptors. The conversation also touches on the sense of taste, noting that it operates on a simpler chemical basis with fewer categories (sweet, salty, bitter, sour) and is less specific than smell. The initial inquiry about the relationship between smell and vibrational frequencies is addressed, emphasizing that the perception of smell is not based on resonance like tuning forks, but rather on chemical interactions.
rody084
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Hi,

how do we percieve smell? i read somewhere once that differnet smells have differnent frequencies at which they vibrate...and those frequencies interact with nerve recepticles in our nose and interact wiht certain genes...

can someone clarify for me how it works off of vibrations that interact with your nose?

thank you in advanced!
 
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Each chemical that we smell reacts with a chemical receptor that is in your nose. These chemical reactions create electricity which is amplified and sent to your brain.
 
how do they react with those receptors though?

is it through vibrations that resonate with the receptors?

like a certain smell has a certain frequency of vibration...

and there is a receptor with the same natural frequency which the smell resonates on?

just like those tuning forks which have a natural frequency that they respond to... do our senses respond in that way also?
 
Not really. It's chemistry. It's not really within my ability to explain that here, but its more like round pegs and round holes, but in three dimensions.
 
hmmm..that makes sense... does the sense of taste work the same also?
 
It's also chemical, but not nearly as specific. You can only taste sweet, salty, bitter and sour. BItter and sour have to do with PH, sweet has to do with sugars, and salty has to do with electrolytes.
 
frequencies

where did you read aboute the frequencies and the smell?
 
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