In the article titled "If you can smell this, you may not have Alzheimer's" writer Dan Nosowitz, freelance writer and editor of Popular Science claims that a low-cost and noninvasive way of finding out if you have Alzheimer's is if you can't smell the scent of peanut butter. He referenced one experiment taken by researchers at the University of Florida which essentially said that if you are cognitively declining, one of the first things to be affected is the first cranial nerve that is associated with smell. Upon further research, it is true that the sense of smell is a common thing to lose if diagnosed with Alzheimer's. So based on the study conducted by the University of Florida, the claim appears to be true yet can be misleading if taken seriously because of its clickbaity nature. In a study done in 2014 by the University of Pennsylvania as a follow up to the one taken by the University of Florida, they were unable to produce the same results and released the statement "Intriguing results don't always hold true across all study populations" (Dr. Wint 2014). All in all, although Nosowitz's claim is true in some implications, it may not be entirely true in others.