News
Calendar
Photo Galleries
Questions and Answers
Archives
-
Archived News and other Items
-
Irish Wolfhound History
Humans can track scents like
dogs, if they abandon all dignity
By Nicholas Wade
Imagine that, by one of life's more serious vicissitudes, you had to
serve as someone's dog. Cheer up: you would do better than you
think, at least at what might seem the hardest part of the job,
tracking a scent.
Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, have found
that people can follow a scent surprisingly well, as long as they do
not mind abandoning all dignity, putting their nose right to the
ground and crawling along with their bottoms in the air.
But the achievement, as Samuel Johnson remarked in another context,
is "like a dog's walking on his hind legs. It is not done well; but
you are surprised to find it done at all."
The researchers' subjects, asked to track a chocolate scent across a
meadow, inched along at a speed of, well, one inch a second. Though
their pace accelerated to two inches a second after a few training
sessions, it seems clear enough why trackers like the Bushmen of the
Kalahari relied on eyesight to follow an animal's trail.
The researchers did not run a dog versus human competition because
the dogs were in a different league, sometimes smelling a dragged
target (a dead bird) from the starting line and making a beeline for
it.
The purpose of the experiment was to inquire whether having two
nostrils spaced slightly apart helps track a scent, just as having
two ears enables the brain to locate the source of a sound. But dogs
cannot report what they are doing and object to procedures like
having one nostril blocked. So the Berkeley researchers, led by Noam
Sobel and Jess Porter, chose more docile experimental animals:
psychology department undergraduates
The undergraduates, as they warmed to the task, spontaneously
mimicked some of the behavior of tracking dogs, like sniffing faster
to take in more olfactory information.
Dr. Sobel said it was not a huge surprise to find that people could
track a scent, but no one had systematically tested the possibility.
Catherine Dulac, an expert at Harvard on smell and behavior in mice,
said that after reading the reappraisal of human olfactory
abilities, "I had such a good laugh." The ability followed, Dr.
Dulac said, from the design of the olfactory system, which perhaps
holds more surprises. "There might be many more things we can do
with our nose," she suggested.
Source: International Herald Tribune,
18 December 2006