Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Curr Biol. 2010 Aug 10;20(15):1356-8. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2010.05.059. Epub 2010 Jul 1.
Vision is widely accepted as the dominant sense in larger primates including humans, whereas olfaction is often considered a vestigial sense yielding only obscure object representations [1]. It is well documented that vision drives olfactory perception [2, 3], but there has been little indication that olfaction could modulate visual perception. Here we introduce smells to a well-established visual phenomenon termed binocular rivalry, perceptual alternations that occur when distinctively different images are separately presented to the two eyes [4]. We show that an odorant congruent to one of the competing images prolongs the time that image is visible and shortens its suppression time in a manner that is automatic, essentially independent of cognitive control, and partly subconscious. Our findings provide the first direct evidence that an olfactory cue biases the dynamic process of binocular rivalry, thereby demonstrating olfactory modulation of visual perception-an effect that has been hitherto unsuspected.
视觉被广泛认为是包括人类在内的大型灵长类动物的主导感觉,而嗅觉则常常被认为是一种残余感觉,只能产生模糊的物体表象[1]。有大量文献记载表明视觉会驱动嗅觉感知[2,3],但很少有迹象表明嗅觉可以调节视觉感知。在这里,我们将气味引入一种被广泛认可的视觉现象——双眼竞争,即当明显不同的图像分别呈现给两只眼睛时,会发生的知觉交替[4]。我们发现,与竞争图像之一一致的气味会延长该图像的可见时间,并缩短其被抑制的时间,这种方式是自动的,本质上独立于认知控制,部分是潜意识的。我们的研究结果首次直接证明了嗅觉线索会影响双眼竞争的动态过程,从而证明了嗅觉对视觉感知的调节作用——这是一种迄今为止尚未被察觉的影响。