Table of contents
List of contributors
Foreword: An olfactory life
Preface
Acknowledgmentsxix
Part I. Perception, psychophysics and odour environment
Chapter 1. Is there a measurement system for odour quality?
Chapter 2. There’s something in the air: Effects of beliefs and expectations on response to environmental odors
Chapter 3. Psychophysical evaluation of pain and olfaction: Many commonalities and a few significant differences
Chapter 4. Olfactory comfort in close relationships: You aren’t the only one who does it
Chapter 5. Olfactory perception
Part II. Learning and memory
Chapter 6. Odor memory and the special role of associative learning
Chapter 7. Knowing what we smell
Chapter 8. Attending to olfactory short-term memory
Part III. Neuropsychology and olfactory dysfunctions
Chapter 9. Olfactory function in Parkinson’s disease
Chapter 10. Remembering what the nose knows
Chapter 11. Olfactory impairment in normal aging and Alzheimer’s disease
Part IV. Odor hedonic perception and development
Chapter 12. The psychophysics of olfaction in the human newborn: Habituation and cross-adaptation
Chapter 13. Emerging chemosensory preferences: Another playground for the innate-acquired dichotomy in human cognition
Chapter 14. The acquisition of odour preferences via evaluative olfactory conditioning: Historical background and state of the art
Dedication. Writings in remembrance of Professor Trygg Engen
Index
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