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Neurobiologist and philosopher conduct ‘smelly’ research

Seed-grants support creative, interdisciplinary research such as effort to explain why smell plays such a key role in life

Neurobiologist and philosopher conduct ‘smelly’ research

Seed-grants support creative, interdisciplinary research such as effort to explain why smell plays such a key role in life

After receiving a $2,500 New Scholarly Endeavor seed grant, awarded through Research & Innovation at the 鶹ӳ, faculty members Dennis Mathew and Benjamin Young began to conduct research on the biophilosophy of smell.

Mathew, a neurobiologist and assistant professor of biology in the College of Science, aims to answer a key question in neuroscience through this interdisciplinary research: How is a sensory input translated by neural circuits in the brain into a behavioral output?

"Using the numerically simple olfactory circuit of the fruit fly larva, and a very controllable set of odor (chemical) inputs, I'm trying to figure out how circuit neurons talk to each other and convert one set of information (odor in the environment) into another set of information (behavior response to the odor," he said.

Young, assistant professor of philosophy in the College of Liberal Arts who works in empirically informed philosophy with a primary interest in consciousness and olfaction, teamed up with Mathew to better understand the connection between what we smell and what the odor object is.

"I have a particular theory in play that what we smell is something about the molecular structure within chemical plumes," he said. "I work on the theoretical issue of why chemicals smell as they do, while Dennis is working at the molecular level of odor receptors and at the cellular level of neural circuitry."

Their work consists of developing their rather novel theory that the composition and properties of odor plumes might explain how we smell.

"This kind of research has a lot of implications both for human health and society," Mathew said. "We know a lot about how the receptors and smell neurons are organized, yet we have a limited understanding of how smell is perceived and how an organism uses its neural circuitry to discriminate between two different smells."

The New Scholarly Endeavor grants are one of two seed-grants programs available through Research & Innovation, the other one is the mICRo grants program. A range of projects representing collaborations between the sciences, engineering, arts and humanities are selected every semester after an application cycle ends.

At first glance, neurobiology wouldn't go hand-in-hand with philosophy, but the grants available intend to encourage just this type of unique cross-disciplinary, scholarly work.

Researches chat outside Researchers Dennis Mathew (left) and Benjamin Young outside of the Fleischmann Agriculture building, discussing their unique research.


Mathew and Young's research aims to explain why smell plays such a key role in life. Mathew stressed the importance of smell in relation to insect pests. Just as fruit flies are attracted to ripened fruit through the sense of smell, mosquitos are attracted to their human hosts and agricultural pests are attracted to their plant hosts mainly through sense of smell.

"At different levels of odor concentrations, Drosophila (fruit flies) either perceive the fruit as being ripe or unripe," Young said. "If we could manipulate the concentration gradient so that they wouldn't perceive it as the same or they wouldn't perceive the ripening, this would have nice implications for agriculture and pest control."

The research being conducted and funded by the University on fruit flies will help not only agriculture and pest control, but will help explain why smells are perceived differently even if they have similar chemical and molecular properties.

"These grants are meant to encourage professors from different disciplines to come together, not only to collaborate on experiments, but also to write proposals to funding agencies to bring forward these new perspectives and ideas," Mathew said. "All research begins with an idea."

Both researchers stressed the importance of acting upon new ideas and collaborating with colleagues from other disciplines. While the two may have collaborated even without the funding opportunity, it has "sped up" their collaboration and allowed them to fund student research assistants.

"One of the most exciting bits is where you get this itch of an idea and then you immerse yourself in the literature," Young said. "Then when you come up with an idea that you can actually test, you realize you can actually do something with this itch. Whether you are right or wrong, there's now something that is a deciding factor. That's the fun bit for me." 

The current application cycle for NSE and mICRo grants is open with a close date of April 3, 2017. Learn more about our mICRo and NSE seed grants, along with other internal awards and funding opportunities offered through Research & Innovation.

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