Smell involves about 400 unique receptors. Each of the hundreds of thousands of scents we can detect is made of a mixture of different odor molecules. Each type of molecule may be detected by an array of receptors, creating a puzzle for the brain to solve each time the nose catches a whiff of something new.
“It’s like hitting keys on a piano to produce a chord,” said Hiroaki Matsunami, PhD, professor of molecular genetics and microbiology at Duke University...
— Read more in Study reveals how odor molecule activates human odorant receptor at The Print.
Hi Robin – Not sure if you meant to include a link, but I don’t see one. It was easy enough to find the article by googling tho, and wow, is it fascinating!
How ridiculous, thank you for noticing! Fixed now.