| Literature DB >> 26300812 |
Caroline Allen1, Jan Havlíček2, S Craig Roberts1.
Abstract
Previous research suggests that artificial fragrances may be chosen to complement or enhance an individual's body odor, rather than simply masking it, and that this may create an odor blend with an emergent quality that is perceptually distinguishable from body odor or fragrance alone. From this, it can be predicted that a new emergent odor might be more easily identified than an individual's body odor in isolation. We used a triangle test paradigm to assess whether fragrance affects people's ability to distinguish between individual odors. Six male and six female donors provided axillary odor samples in three conditions (without fragrance, wearing their own fragrance, and wearing an assigned fragrance). In total, 296 female and 131 male participants selected the odd one from three odor samples (two from one donor, one from another; both of the same sex). We found that participants could discriminate between the odors at above chance levels in all three odor conditions. Olfactory identification ability (measured using Sniffin' Sticks) positively predicted discrimination performance, and sex differences in performance were also observed, with female raters being correct more often than men. Success rates were also higher for odors of male donors. Additionally, while performance was above chance in all conditions, individual odor discrimination varied across the three conditions. Discrimination rate was significantly higher in the "no fragrance" condition than either of the fragranced conditions. Importantly, however, discrimination rate was also significantly higher in the "own fragrance" condition than the "assigned fragrance" condition, suggesting that naturally occurring variance in body odor is more preserved when blended with fragrances that people choose for themselves, compared with other fragrances. Our data are consistent with the idea that fragrance choices are influenced by fragrance interactions with an individual's own body odor.Entities:
Keywords: body odor; deodorant; identification; olfaction; smell; triangle test
Year: 2015 PMID: 26300812 PMCID: PMC4528100 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Donor pairings used in each triangle test.
| A | 1 and 2 | 3 and 4 | 5 and 6 | |
| B | 3 and 4 | 5 and 4 | 1 and 2 | |
| C | 5 and 6 | 1 and 2 | 3 and 4 | |
| D | 7 and 8 | 11 and 12 | 9 and 10 | |
| E | 9 and 10 | 7 and 8 | 11 and 12 | |
| F | 11 and 12 | 9 and 10 | 7 and 8 | |
Each participant took part in one session, and were therefore exposed to all three conditions, with three odors in each (two of the same, one of a different donor), all of which were of the same sex. Consequently each participant was exposed to either all of the male donor samples OR all of the female donor samples. Mean participant age ± SD is shown for each test session.
FIGURE 1Proportion of participants who correctly chose the odd one out on the triangle test. Dashed line indicates the proportion of correct responses which would be expected by chance (0.33). Binomial tests indicate significance above chance level ***p < 0.001.
FIGURE 2Proportion of male and female participants who correctly chose the odd one out on the triangle test when using female samples (A) and male samples (B). Dashed line indicates the proportion of correct responses which would be expected by chance (0.33). Binomial tests indicated significance above chance *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.