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olfactoria

Olfactoria is a term that appears in discussions of the sense of smell to denote the olfactory domain, encompassing both peripheral receptors in the nasal cavity and central neural circuits involved in odor detection and processing. Etymologically from Latin olfactus “smell” and the suffix -aria indicating a place or domain, the word conveys a sense of a field or collection of olfactory elements, though its usage today is not standard in modern anatomy.

In contemporary scientific literature, the primary terminology for the olfactory system is more specific: olfactory epithelium,

In popular culture and speculative biology, olfactoria may appear as a fictional organ, system, or sensory modality

See also: Olfactory system, Olfactory epithelium, Olfactory bulb, Olfactory cortex.

olfactory
receptor
neurons,
olfactory
bulb,
piriform
cortex,
and
related
pathways.
As
a
result,
olfactoria
is
encountered
infrequently
and
largely
in
historical,
theoretical,
or
pedagogical
contexts.
Some
authors
employ
olfactoria
as
a
collective
term
to
discuss
integrated
olfactory
processing
across
peripheral
and
central
structures,
while
others
use
it
in
speculative
or
historical
narratives
about
sensory
biology.
in
imagined
species
or
in
discussions
of
augmented
olfaction
and
cross-modal
perception.
The
term
functions
as
a
convenient
umbrella
label
rather
than
a
precise
anatomical
designation.