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Characterizing Olfactory Brain Responses in Young Infants

Thorsten Kahnt, Ph.D.Featured Paper of the Month – Octobcer 2025

Published in The Journal of Neuroscience by Thorsten Kahnt of the NIDA IRP Learning and Decision-Making Section.

Summary

Odor perception is important in early human development, but how the infant brain responds to odors has remained unclear. In this study, we presented different odors to sleeping infants while recording their nasal airflow and brain activity using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Odors evoked strong fMRI responses throughout the olfactory cortex and thalamus. Moreover, analysis of nasal airflow showed that infants inhaled more strongly to pleasant compared to unpleasant odors, suggesting they may adjust their breathing based on odor preference.

Publication Information

Shanahan, Laura K; Mithal, Leena B; Messina, Marci; Office, Emma; Wakschlag, Lauren; Seed, Patrick; Kahnt, Thorsten

Characterizing Olfactory Brain Responses in Young Infants Journal Article

In: J Neurosci, vol. 45, no. 11, 2025, ISSN: 1529-2401.

Abstract | Links

@article{pmid39870525,
title = {Characterizing Olfactory Brain Responses in Young Infants},
author = {Laura K Shanahan and Leena B Mithal and Marci Messina and Emma Office and Lauren Wakschlag and Patrick Seed and Thorsten Kahnt},
url = {https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39870525/},
doi = {10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1780-24.2025},
issn = {1529-2401},
year = {2025},
date = {2025-03-01},
urldate = {2025-03-01},
journal = {J Neurosci},
volume = {45},
number = {11},
abstract = {Odor perception plays a critical role in early human development, but the underlying neural mechanisms are not fully understood. To investigate these, we presented appetitive and aversive odors to infants of both sexes at 1 month of age while recording functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and nasal airflow data. Infants slept during odor presentation to allow MRI scanning. We found that odors evoke robust fMRI activity in the bilateral olfactory cortex and thalamus and that fMRI response magnitudes in the olfactory cortex differ across odors. However, in contrast to prior work in adults, we did not find compelling evidence that odor stimuli evoke discriminable fMRI activity patterns in the olfactory cortex or thalamus using two different multivariate pattern analysis techniques. Finally, the average inhale airflow rate was higher for appetitive odors than aversive odors, which tentatively suggests that infants could modulate their respiration to reflect odor valence. Overall, these results show strong neural responses to odors at this early developmental stage and highlight nasal airflow as a behavioral metric for assessing odor preference in infants.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

Close

Odor perception plays a critical role in early human development, but the underlying neural mechanisms are not fully understood. To investigate these, we presented appetitive and aversive odors to infants of both sexes at 1 month of age while recording functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and nasal airflow data. Infants slept during odor presentation to allow MRI scanning. We found that odors evoke robust fMRI activity in the bilateral olfactory cortex and thalamus and that fMRI response magnitudes in the olfactory cortex differ across odors. However, in contrast to prior work in adults, we did not find compelling evidence that odor stimuli evoke discriminable fMRI activity patterns in the olfactory cortex or thalamus using two different multivariate pattern analysis techniques. Finally, the average inhale airflow rate was higher for appetitive odors than aversive odors, which tentatively suggests that infants could modulate their respiration to reflect odor valence. Overall, these results show strong neural responses to odors at this early developmental stage and highlight nasal airflow as a behavioral metric for assessing odor preference in infants.

Close

  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39870525/
  • doi:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1780-24.2025

Close

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