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A Principal Odor Map Unifies Diverse Tasks in Human Olfactory Perception

Brian K. Lee, Emily J. Mayhew, Benjamin Sanchez-Lengeling, Jennifer N. Wei, Wesley W. Qian, Kelsie Little, Matthew Andres, Britney B. Nguyen, Theresa Moloy, Jane K. Parker, View ORCID ProfileRichard C. Gerkin, View ORCID ProfileJoel D. Mainland, Alexander B. Wiltschko
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.01.504602
Brian K. Lee
1Google Research, Brain Team; Cambridge, MA, USA
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Emily J. Mayhew
2Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Michigan State University; East Lansing, MI, USA
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Benjamin Sanchez-Lengeling
1Google Research, Brain Team; Cambridge, MA, USA
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Jennifer N. Wei
1Google Research, Brain Team; Cambridge, MA, USA
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Wesley W. Qian
1Google Research, Brain Team; Cambridge, MA, USA
3Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois; Urbana-Champaign, IL, USA
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Kelsie Little
4Monell Chemical Senses Center; Philadelphia, PA, USA
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Matthew Andres
4Monell Chemical Senses Center; Philadelphia, PA, USA
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Britney B. Nguyen
4Monell Chemical Senses Center; Philadelphia, PA, USA
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Theresa Moloy
4Monell Chemical Senses Center; Philadelphia, PA, USA
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Jane K. Parker
5Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Reading; Reading, Berkshire, UK
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Richard C. Gerkin
1Google Research, Brain Team; Cambridge, MA, USA
6School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University; Tempe, AZ, USA
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  • ORCID record for Richard C. Gerkin
Joel D. Mainland
4Monell Chemical Senses Center; Philadelphia, PA, USA
7Department of Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania; Philadelphia, PA, USA
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  • For correspondence: jmainland@monell.org alex.bw@googlemail.com
Alexander B. Wiltschko
1Google Research, Brain Team; Cambridge, MA, USA
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  • For correspondence: jmainland@monell.org alex.bw@googlemail.com
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Abstract

Mapping molecular structure to odor perception is a key challenge in olfaction. Here, we use graph neural networks (GNN) to generate a Principal Odor Map (POM) that preserves perceptual relationships and enables odor quality prediction for novel odorants. The model is as reliable as a human in describing odor quality: on a prospective validation set of 400 novel odorants, the model-generated odor profile more closely matched the trained panel mean (n=15) than did the median panelist. Applying simple, interpretable, theoretically-rooted transformations, the POM outperformed chemoinformatic models on several other odor prediction tasks, indicating that the POM successfully encoded a generalized map of structure-odor relationships. This approach broadly enables odor prediction and paves the way toward digitizing odors.

One-Sentence Summary An odor map achieves human-level odor description performance and generalizes to diverse odor-prediction tasks.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
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Posted September 06, 2022.
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A Principal Odor Map Unifies Diverse Tasks in Human Olfactory Perception
Brian K. Lee, Emily J. Mayhew, Benjamin Sanchez-Lengeling, Jennifer N. Wei, Wesley W. Qian, Kelsie Little, Matthew Andres, Britney B. Nguyen, Theresa Moloy, Jane K. Parker, Richard C. Gerkin, Joel D. Mainland, Alexander B. Wiltschko
bioRxiv 2022.09.01.504602; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.01.504602
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A Principal Odor Map Unifies Diverse Tasks in Human Olfactory Perception
Brian K. Lee, Emily J. Mayhew, Benjamin Sanchez-Lengeling, Jennifer N. Wei, Wesley W. Qian, Kelsie Little, Matthew Andres, Britney B. Nguyen, Theresa Moloy, Jane K. Parker, Richard C. Gerkin, Joel D. Mainland, Alexander B. Wiltschko
bioRxiv 2022.09.01.504602; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.09.01.504602

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