Essentials: How Smell, Taste & Pheromones Shape Behavior

Essentials: How Smell, Taste & Pheromones Sha...

Suivant

Improve Energy & Longevity by Optimizing Mitochondria | Dr. Martin Picard

Dr. Martin Picard, PhD, is a professor of behavioral medicine at Columbia University and an expert on how our behaviors and psychology shape cellular energy production and rates of aging. He explains that your mitochondria don’t just “make energy”; they translate what you do—your ...  Afficher plus

Essentials: How to Build, Maintain & Repair Gut Health | Dr. Justin Sonnenburg

In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, my guest is Dr. Justin Sonnenburg, PhD, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford University. We discuss how microbes in our gut impact our mental and physical health and how diet and the environment affect the gut microbiome. ...  Afficher plus

Épisodes Recommandés

How We Smell
How We're Wired

How do we smell? What role does our sense of smell play in our closest relationships? And how are brands creating scents to keep us coming back for more? In this episode of How We’re Wired, join evolutionary anthropologist Dr Anna Machin as she unpicks the science of smell, from ...  Afficher plus

Why do bad smells smell bad?
Chemistry For Your Life

#030 Rebroadcast

Melissa and Jam continue to sniff out the chemistry of smell, focusing this week on bad smells. Why are we so good at smelling bad smells? Why do they haunt us at night? Why are some bad smells so strong and long lasting, while many gre ...

  Afficher plus

ASMR Sensory Smell Exam | Soft Spoken
ASMR by GentleWhispering

Welcome! Today, I'll be testing your sense of smell with a variety of recognizable scents. Follow along as I examine how well your nose can identify these aromas. #ASMR #GentleWhispering #exam

 

'Vivaldi smells like breakfast sausage'
On Point with Meghna Chakrabarti

Smell can trigger memories and influence emotions. New research is giving us insight into how that happens, including why some people can "smell" music and why losing the sense of smell can alert us to what might make us sick.