Scientists reviewed existing research, examining data and delving into the historical writings that helped create the long-held misconception that human sense of smell was inferior because of the size of the olfactory bulb.
"For so long people failed to stop and question this claim, even people who study the sense of smell for a living," said John McGann, associate professor at Rutgers University in the US.
Humans can differentiate between maybe one trillion different odours, which is far more, than the claim by "folk wisdom and poorly sourced introductory psychology textbooks," that insist humans could only detect about 10,000 different odours, he said.
According to McGann, 19th century brain surgeon Paul Broca is the culprit for the falsehood that humans have an impoverished olfactory system.
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This an assertion even influenced Sigmund Freud to insist that this deficiency made humans susceptible to mental illness, said McGann.
The truth about smell, is that the human olfactory bulb, which sends signals to other areas of a very powerful human brain to help identify scents, is quite large and similar in the number of neurons to other mammals, McGann said.
The olfactory receptor neurons in the nose work by making physical contact with the molecules composing the odour, and they send this information back to that region of the brain.
"We are capable of tracking odour trails, and our behavioural and affective states are influenced by our sense of smell," he said.
In Broco's 1879 writings, he claimed that the smaller volume of the olfactory area compared to the rest of the brain meant that humans had free will and did not have to rely on smell to survive and stay alive like dogs and other mammals.
McGann said that there is no support for the notion that a larger olfactory bulb increases sense of smell based solely on size.
The problem with this continuing myth, McGann said, is that smell is much more important than we think.
It strongly influences human behaviour, elicits memories and emotions, and shapes perceptions.