Experimental Proposal: “The Olfactory-Shock Paradox and Biological Archive Activation”

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​1. Hypothesis

​”The neural pathways (string-like structures) imprinted between ages 0-2 via maternal milk, postpartum (lohusa) scent, and birth enzymes can be reactivated in adulthood. If a subject is exposed to this ‘shared maternal scent’ and simultaneously subjected to a sudden shock (fear), the brain enters an extreme survival mode, triggering a rapid scan of the entire life archive—known as the ‘film strip’ effect.

​2. Experimental Groups and Participants

  • Group A (Experimental): Adults who were breastfed during infancy and possess a healthy sense of smell.
  • Group B (Control): Individuals who were formula-fed or had different maternal scent-imprinting experiences.
  • Group C (Neutral): A group exposed to a common, non-maternal scent instead of the postpartum scent.

​3. Required Materials

  • Scent Sample: Authentic postpartum (lohusa) scent collected within the first 24 hours of birth (a synthesis of sweat, milk, and amniotic fluid components).
  • Measurement Devices: EEG or fMRI to monitor brain waves, specifically Gamma and Theta waves associated with visual processing and memory retrieval.
  • Shock Stimulus: An unexpected, sudden sound or visual trigger (a harmless but startling ‘fear prank’).

​4. Experimental Procedure (Protocol)

Step 1: Olfactory Priming (Preparation)

The subject is placed in a room saturated with the postpartum scent. During this phase, the heart rate typically slows, and the brain begins to enter the “0-2 year safety mode” (the peace of the womb). This effectively unlocks the door to the “archive room” of the brain.

Step 2: Cellular Memory Activation

As the subject inhales the ‘shared scent’—the same scent imprinted in their own cells since birth—the ‘string-like’ neural structures vibrate. The system reaches its most vulnerable and purest state of being.

Step 3: Sudden Shock (The Trigger)

At the peak of this sensory depth and tranquility, a sudden fear stimulus is applied.

Step 4: Data Analysis (Evidence of the ‘Film Strip’)

Neuroimaging (EEG/fMRI) records whether there is a hyper-acceleration in the visual processing centers (connected to the retina) and the memory center (hippocampus). Post-experiment, participants are interviewed to confirm if they experienced a rapid sequence of life memories (the film strip).

​5. Expected Results

  • In Group A, the combination of the postpartum scent and the shock is expected to trigger a significantly higher rate of “visual memory scanning” compared to other groups.
  • ​Because the subject’s internal ‘mother-scent’ merges with the external postpartum scent, the brain perceives the fear not as a simple threat, but as an existential crisis, forcing a high-speed playback of all survival data stored since birth.

​6. Scientific Validation

​This experiment could explain why some intensive care patients respond to specific scents when all other stimuli fail. According to this theory, the scent is the key, and fear is the ignition. When they combine, the film of life plays back to the very beginning.

Experimental Slogan: “Remember the scent of your mother within your own body; it is your primary map for survival.”


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