| Literature DB >> 27160439 |
Jonathan Williams1, Christof Stönner1, Jörg Wicker2, Nicolas Krauter2, Bettina Derstroff1, Efstratios Bourtsoukidis1, Thomas Klüpfel1, Stefan Kramer2.
Abstract
Human beings continuously emit chemicals into the air by breath and through the skin. In order to determine whether these emissions vary predictably in response to audiovisual stimuli, we have continuously monitored carbon dioxide and over one hundred volatile organic compounds in a cinema. It was found that many airborne chemicals in cinema air varied distinctively and reproducibly with time for a particular film, even in different screenings to different audiences. Application of scene labels and advanced data mining methods revealed that specific film events, namely "suspense" or "comedy" caused audiences to change their emission of specific chemicals. These event-type synchronous, broadcasted human chemosignals open the possibility for objective and non-invasive assessment of a human group response to stimuli by continuous measurement of chemicals in air. Such methods can be applied to research fields such as psychology and biology, and be valuable to industries such as film making and advertising.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27160439 PMCID: PMC4862009 DOI: 10.1038/srep25464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
| (a) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Film | Number of Screenings | |
| Buddy | 17 | |
| Walking with Dinosaurs | 15 | |
| The Hobbit – The desolation of Smaug | 15 | |
| The Secret Life of Walter Mitty | 15 | |
| The Hunger Games 2 | 10 | |
| Carrie | 7 | |
| Suck me Shakespeare | 5 | |
| The Little Ghost | 4 | |
| Journey to the Christmas Star | 4 | |
| Paranormal Activity 6 | 4 | |
| Belle and Sebastian | 3 | |
| The Counselor | 3 | |
| Machete Kills | 2 | |
| Cloudy with a chance of Meatballs 2 | 2 | |
| The Physician | 1 | |
| Bolshoi: Sleeping Beauty | 1 | |
| Label | Sub-label | Relative Frequency |
| Everyday Life | 0.025 | |
| Dream | 0.016 | |
| Landscape | 0.040 | |
| Conversation | 0.680 | |
| Aggressive | 0.008 | |
| Conv. Main Actor | 0.321 | |
| Action | 0.141 | |
| Death | 0.022 | |
| Running | 0.031 | |
| Recovery | 0.001 | |
| Laughter | 0.004 | |
| Sleeping | 0.001 | |
| Blood (violence) | 0.028 | |
| Sex | 0.003 | |
| Kissing | 0.009 | |
| Crying | 0.007 | |
| Main Char. Cry | 0.006 | |
| Injury | 0.008 | |
| Sudden shock | 0.026 | |
| Suspense | 0.283 | |
| Chase | 0.002 | |
| Hidden Threat | 0.005 | |
| Hiding | 0.002 | |
| Comedy | 0.054 | |
| Romantic Comedy | 0.002 | |
| Mystery | 0.002 | |
| Romance | 0.014 | |
| Drama | 0.019 | |
A summary of the film screenings (a), labels and associated sublabels used in the film scene content (b) and film scene genre (c) annotation.
Figure 1Selected sections of the CO2 measurements, (a) 5 days, (b) 1 day and (c) 1 film. The numbers above the peaks indicate the number of people in the audience.
Figure 2Measurements of CO2, isoprene and acetone taken during four separate screenings of “Hunger Games 2”.
Figure 3Shown are the results when two thirds of the whole film screening dataset is randomly selected (15 times) and the resultant model tested on the remaining third.
The boxes indicate the extent of 25% of the data either side of the median (solid line). The dashed vertical line represents the lowest/highest datapoints that are still in the 1.5 interquartile range while the circles are outliers. (a) shows AUC which expresses the ratio between true positives (when the model correctly predicted labels based on mass decision trees) and false positives (backward prediction). A random prediction produces an AUC value of 0.5. (b) shows the ability of an individual mass to be predicted by the labels (forward prediction). The performance of this prediction versus the real value for VOC mixing ratios is given as the Pearson’s correlation coefficient (r). High correlation coefficients indicate the predictive model was successful for that particular species, and not that all species with high correlation coefficients are inter-correlated.
Film labels and masses with significant causal links are shown (Injury, Comedy, and Mystery) and two examples where masses and labels were not linked (Romance and Chase).
| Injury | ||||
| Mass | Sig | AUC | Formula | Possible ID/Comment |
| none | 0.84929 | |||
| m 374.082 | 0.004 | 0.81808 | siloxanes | |
| m 73.947 | 0.015 | 0.82840 | ||
| m 85.028 | 0.018 | 0.82524 | C4H4O2 | 2 (5H)-furanone (Br) |
| m 105.034 | 0.030 | 0.81353 | C4H8OS | 3-(methylthio)-propanal (F, U, M) |
| m 100.938 | 0.031 | 0.81562 | ||
| m 40.974 | 0.035 | 0.82323 | ||
| m 45.034 | 0.040 | 0.82347 | Acetaldehyde (F, U, Br, Sk, M, Bl, Sa), Ethylene oxide (F, Br) | |
| m 55.058 | 0.040 | 0.83322 | Butadiene (Br), Butyne (Br) | |
| m 33.034 | 0.044 | 0.82877 | Methanol (F, Br, M, Bl) | |
| Comedy | ||||
| none | 0.77843 | |||
| m 235.208 | 0.010 | 0.75878 | C15H26N2 | |
| m 111.080 | 0.031 | 0.76360 | C7H10O | 1,3-cyclohexadien-1-yl methyl ether (Br), 2-ethyl-5-methylfuran (F, U, Br), (E, Z)-2,4-heptadienal (M), 3-methyl-2-cyclohexen-1-one (U, Br), propylfuran (Br), 2,3,5-trimethylfuran (U, Br) |
| m121.065 | 0.045 | 0.76266 | C8H8O | Acetophenone (F, U, Br, Sk, M, Sa), 2,3-dihydro-1-benzofuran (Br), 4-methylbenzaldehyde (F), phenyl acetaldehyde/phenylethanal/benzene acetaldehyde (F, M) |
| Mystery | ||||
| none | 0.79193 | |||
| m 217.204 | 0.024 | 0.73270 | C15H20O | a-hexyl cinnamaldehyde (Sk) |
| m 108.959 | 0.030 | 0.69253 | ||
| m 159.143 | 0.040 | 0.69335 | C9H18O2 | 1-methylhexyl acetate (Sk), isoamyl butanoate (Br), heptanoic acid, ethyl ester (F), hexanoic acid, propyl ester (F), 3-methylbutanoic acid, butyl ester (F), 2-methyloctanoic acid (Sk), 2-methylbutyl 2-methylpropanoate (Br), nonanoic acid (U, Br, Sk, M, Sa), pentanoic acid, butyl ester (F), propanoic acid, hexyl ester (F) |
| m 138.140 | 0.046 | 0.71237 | 13CC9H16 | Isotope of monoterpenes |
| Romance | ||||
| none | 0.55738 | |||
| m 95.049 | 0.157 | 0.54349 | C6H6O | |
| m 79.002 | 0.165 | 0.54388 | ||
| m 70.077 | 0.289 | 0.54591 | 13CC4H8 | Isotope of isoprene |
| Chase | ||||
| none | 0.55248 | |||
| m122.109 | 0.128 | 0.47477 | C8H11N | |
| m100.084 | 0.135 | 0.47568 | C5H9NO | |
| m164.971 | 0.169 | 0.47155 | ||
| m135.030 | 0.175 | 0.50660 | C8H6O2 | |
The AUC value for “none” means the result with the complete dataset, and the values below are AUCs when the stated mass is removed from the model. Significance and AUC are given for each mass as well as an elemental formula and possible molecular identities based on previous measurements from human emissions summarized by de Lacy Costello et al.1. The abbreviations refer to where the species were previously measured Br = Breath, Sk = Skin, U = Urine, F = Faeces, Bl = Blood and M = Mucus).
Figure 4(a) The Cinestar Cinema in Mainz, Germany, (b) The 230 seat capacity cinema audioreum, (c) the air ventilation system, (d) insertion of the Teflon inlet into the 75 × 75 cm ventilation system. (a,b) are reproduced with permission from Cinestar.