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FSU researcher wins NIH grant to study a hidden part of our sense of smell

By: Patty Cox | Published: | 12:41 pm | 

A Florida State University researcher has received a five-year, $1.86 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study how a little-understood part of the brain affects our sense of smell.  

Assistant Professor of Psychology Adam Dewan will lead a study of the dorsal tenia tecta, a brain region that receives input from the olfactory bulb but has no known function. Dewan’s team will investigate this region to find out how it’s connected to other parts of the brain, how neurons within this region respond to odor and its overall contribution to our sense of smell.  

WHAT DO THE RESEARCHERS AIM TO FIGURE OUT?    

HOW COULD THIS RESEARCH HELP PEOPLE? As the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted, there is an intimate link between our sense of smell and well-being. It plays a vital role in our daily lives, influencing our food choices and social interactions and helping us detect danger. Understanding the intricacies of how our brains process odors can have profound implications for our overall health and quality of life. Dewan’s research will take a major step toward answering this question by providing the first in-depth characterization of the dorsal tenia tecta.     

WHO’S INVOLVED? Graduate student Samuel Caton and research technician Austin Pauley will play essential roles in this project. Roberto Vincis, assistant professor of biology, and Cecilia Bouaichi, a graduate student in the Vincis Laboratory, are important collaborators.