Abstract

Complex odor mixtures have traditionally been thought to be perceived configurally, implying that there is little identification of the individual components in the mixture. Prior research has suggested that the chemical and or perceptual similarity of components in a mixture may influence whether they can be detected individually; however, how experience and training influence the ability to identify individual components in complex mixtures (a figure-background segregation) is less clear. Figure-background segregation is a critical task for dogs tasked with discriminating between Home Made Explosives and very similar, but innocuous, complex odor mixtures. In a cross-over experimental design, we evaluated the effect of two training procedures on dogs' ability to identify the presence of a critical oxidizer in complex odor mixtures. In the Mixture training procedure, dogs received odor mixtures that varied from trial to trial with and without an oxidizer. In the more typical procedure for canine detection training, dogs were presented with the pure oxidizer only, and had to discriminate this from decoy mixtures (target-only training). Mixture training led to above chance discrimination of the oxidizer from variable backgrounds and dogs were able to readily generalize performance, with no decrement, to mixtures containing novel odorants. Target-only training, however, led to a precipitous drop in hit rate when the oxidizer was presented in a mixture background containing either familiar and/or novel odorants. Furthermore, by giving Target-only trained dogs Mixture training, they learned to identify the oxidizer in mixtures. Together, these results demonstrate that training method has significant impacts on the perception of components in odor mixtures and highlights the importance of olfactory learning for the effective detection of Home Made Explosives by dogs.

Highlights

  • Olfactory figure-background segregation is the identification of a target odorant against a complex odor background

  • Perhaps similar processes extend to olfactory processes in dogs. This would have important implications for detection dogs and suggest the ability to perform an elemental separation likely depends on training history [3, 15, 18, 19]. These results suggest that for dogs to show optimal performance in detecting an odor target in highly variable and complex backgrounds, they need to be trained with a variety of odor mixtures with and without the target

  • The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of form of training on configural olfactory processing and detection of an oxidizer target in odor mixtures

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Summary

Introduction

Olfactory figure-background segregation is the identification of a target odorant against a complex odor background. Animals need to be able to identify target odorants, such as food items, even against complex and variable backgrounds [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. Target and background odor plumes can be temporally and or spatially segregated thereby simplifying olfactory figurebackground segregation [1, 2, 5, 6]. A more complex task, occurs when a single component needs to be distinguished from a mixture of simultaneously presented odorants [7, 8]. Some researchers have questioned whether identifying the components of such a mixture is possible at all [8]. Mixtures tend to be perceived configurally, such that the mixture produces a unique percept distinct from the constituent elements, and this may vary depending on the chemical similarities of the components in the mixture [9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14]

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