Scent therapy could be a useful tool for helping people with depression tap into their autobiographical memories, a small trial hints, according to Live Science.
People with depression may struggle to recall specific memories about their lives — for instance, a dinner party with friends or a visit to their favorite coffee shop. Now, a small trial suggests that "scent therapy" could help people with depression unlock those difficult-to-access autobiographical memories (AMs).
The trial, described Tuesday (Feb. 13) in the journal JAMA Network Open, included 32 adults with major depressive disorder and used familiar scents — such as coffee grounds, oranges and Vicks VapoRub — as prompts for the participants to recall specific memories. So, for example, if presented with coffee, a person might think of meeting up with their sibling for lattes on a specific spring afternoon, as opposed to just generally thinking of the local cafe they often visit.
Previous studies had tried similar memory tests but instead used words and pictures as cues for the participants. So, in the new trial, the scientists switched between scents and words as cues, to see if one type of trigger might be more effective at jogging people's autobiographical memories. They found that the participants recalled more specific memories when cued by smell.
"It was surprising to me that nobody thought to look at memory recall in depressed individuals using scent cues before," senior study author Kymberly Young, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh, said in a statement. Scents are known to trigger strong, often emotional, memories in a unique way that other stimuli don't necessarily do.
"The olfactory system is the only sensory system that has a direct, superhighway access to the memory centers of the brain and the emotional centers of the brain," Michael Leon, a professor emeritus of neurobiology and behavior at the University of California, Irvine, who wasn’t involved with the new study, told NBC News. "All the other senses have to take the side streets to get there."
So, in theory, harnessing smell might be a good strategy for rewiring those emotional centers in depression and unlocking the memories they help to recall. "If we improve memory, we can improve problem solving, emotion regulation and other functional problems that depressed individuals often experience," Young said.
"In the verbal cue condition, 52% of memories were specific, while in the odor cue condition, 68% of memories were specific," the study authors wrote in the paper. "Additionally, we found that these AMs are rated more arousing and vivid upon recall," compared with the memories cued by words, they noted.
The team plans to run future trials with the addition of brain scans, to see how the amygdala, a key emotion-processing hub in the brain, responds to the treatment.
"We hope this initial study spurs larger studies in more diverse samples that include healthy control participants" — meaning people without depression — "to further investigate and explain these associations," they concluded.