http://www.ted.com Samantha Power tells a story of a complicated hero, Sergio Vieira de Mello. This UN diplomat walked a thin moral line, negotiating with the world’s worst dictators to help their people survive crisis. It’s a compelling story told with a fiery passion.
Lee Smolin: How science is like democracy
http://www.ted.com Physicist Lee Smolin talks about how the scientific community works: as he puts it, “we fight and argue as hard as we can,” but everyone accepts that the next generation of scientists will decide who’s right. And, he says, that’s how democracy works, too.
Luca Turin: The science of scent
Download this talk
*
*
*
*
* Video to desktop (Zipped MP4)
* Video to iTunes (MP4)
*
Share this talk
* Email to a friend »
*
Post to Digg or del.icio.us
* Embed this video
* Link to this talk
Discuss this talk: The science of scent ( Luca Turin )
Sign in to add comments or Join (It’s free and fast!)
Jeffrey Soreff November 8 2008
The explanation of the mechanism of smell seems somewhat implausible, but, yes, there are a variety of ways one could make a nanoscale IR spectrometer. Another option would be to look for resonant energy transfer, not between a tunnelling electron, but between a vibrational excitation in another molecule and the test molecule.
One skeptical note: I’ve handled heavy water, and never noticed an odor. If this theory is right, it should smell very different from the odorless background of normal water.
One application note: If the theory is right, there should be a huge range of deuterated compounds with distinct smells… and there would be a wide choice of very safe ones.
Tom Kraemer November 7 2008
What a wonderful explanation of scent and our sense of smell. Thank you for a profound insight. You’ve changed my understanding of my formerly least appreciated sense!
Rylan Grayston November 7 2008
I think some homeopathic practitioners are running into a very similar situation as you.
In that they get results that they cannot fully explain the workings of.
In the past I often found myself scoffing at the explanations I have heard. The use of words like energy flow to describe how a massage works has been
hard for me to respond too. I have discovered that when some one makes no scene at all they are often using a hole different set of definitions than I know of. For example my dictionary has 6 distinct definitions for plasma. How may dose yours have and which are you using?
Your story is a great example of how
-some one with an explanation that seems obvious and correct with no results
is of no more value than
-someone with concrete results that support a seemingly ridiculous explanation.
Its very entertaining to hear the later come together.
Thanks for explaining how the hard evidence implies that the human body can detect molecular vibration and interpret it as smell.
ps I laughed at the biologist vs physicist joke e mediately, common tedsters lighten up
that was elegantly place hummor!
cheers!
Showing page 1 of 1 (3 total comments)
* « Previous
* 1
* Next »
About this talk
http://www.ted.com What’s the science behind a sublime perfume? With charm and precision, biophysicist Luca Turin explains the molecular makeup — and the art — of a scent.
Tim Brown: Tales of creativity and play
http://www.ted.com At the 2008 Serious Play conference, designer Tim Brown talks about the powerful relationship between creative thinking and play — with many examples you can try at home (and one that maybe you shouldn’t).
Walk the earth … my 17-year vow of silence | John Francis
For almost three decades, John Francis has been a planetwalker, traveling the globe by foot and sail with a message of environmental respect and responsibility (for 10 of those years without speaking). A funny, thoughtful talk with occasional banjo.
Follow us on Twitter at
http://www.twitter.com/tednews
Checkout our Facebook page for TED exclusives at
https://www.facebook.com/TED
James Surowiecki: The power and the danger of online crowds
http://www.ted.com James Surowiecki pinpoints the moment when social media became an equal player in the world of news-gathering: the 2005 tsunami, when YouTube video, blogs, IMs and txts carried the news — and preserved moving personal stories from the tragedy.
Graham Hawkes: Fly the seas on a submarine with wings
http://www.ted.com Graham Hawkes takes us aboard his graceful, winged submarines to the depths of planet Ocean (a.k.a. “Earth”). It’s a deep blue world we landlubbers rarely see in 3D.
Newton Aduaka: The story of Ezra, a child soldier
http://www.ted.com Filmmaker Newton Aduaka shows clips from his powerful, lyrical feature film “Ezra,” about a child soldier in Sierra Leone.
Keith Schacht & Zach Kaplan: Products (and toys) from the fu
http://www.ted.com The Inventables guys, Zach Kaplan and Keith Schacht, demo some amazing new materials and how we might use them. Look for squishy magnets, odor-detecting ink, “dry” liquid and a very surprising 10-foot pole.