Abstract: | Self-and cross-adaptation are believed to result from stimulationof the same olfactory sensory channels. These adaptation phenomenawere studied after exposures to 5-androst-16-en-3-one (androstenone)and a synthetic perceptual analog (DMCMC), viz. a racemic mixtureof the isomers 4(R)-(4',4'-dimethyl-cyclohexyl)-2(R)-methylcyclohexanoneand 4(S)-(4',4'-dimethylcyclohexyl)-2(S)-methylcyclohexanone.In Experiment 1, six subjects very sensitive to androstenonereceived four randomized sequences of six concentrations offour ordants (androstenone, DMCMC, amyl acetate, and Galaxolide*;plus blanks) before and following adaptation to either androstenoneor DMCMC. Exposure to each odorant resulted in self-adaptation.Measures of stimulus intensity and identification thresholdrevealed reciprocal cross-adaptation between androstenone andDMCMC, but no cross-adaptation to amyl acetate or Galaxolide.The degree of cross-adaptation was asymmetric; adaptation toDMCMC resulted in more complete adaptation to androstenone thanvice versa. This asymmetry was apparently due to intensity differences;when stimuli were matched for intensity, the asymmetry disappeared(Experiment 2). These results demonstrate cross-adaptation forqualitatively similar, but not dissimilar, odors and suggestthat androstenone and its perceptual analog DMCMC share thesame sensory channels. |