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Old-age deficits in the sense of smell as gauged by thresholds, magnitude matching, and odor identification.
Authors:Stevens, Joseph C.   Cain, William S.
Abstract:Twenty elderly subjects (70–90 years old) and 20 young control subjects (18–24 years old) underwent three kinds of olfactory testing: absolute thresholds to three odorants (d-limonene, iso-amyl butyrate, benzaldehyde), magnitude matching of these odorants to salt tastes, and odor identification of 30 common substances. For all three odorants elderly subjects' mean threshold significantly exceeded that of the young by about nine-fold for d-limonene, about three-fold for benzaldehyde, and about two-fold for iso-amyl butyrate. These threshold differences predict approximate concentration differences necessary to arouse the same estimated odor strength above the threshold for the elderly and the young. Young subjects also scored better than the elderly in odor identification, even when subjects were given four alternatives from which to select the correct label. Unimpaired olfactory functioning is uncommon in the elderly; correlational tests show that as a group the young have better olfactory ability and show more interindividual uniformity. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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