| Literature DB >> 34173932 |
Abstract
In recent decades, there has been an explosion of research into the crossmodal influence of olfactory cues on multisensory person perception. Numerous peer-reviewed studies have documented that a variety of olfactory stimuli, from ambient malodours through to fine fragrances, and even a range of chemosensory body odours can influence everything from a perceiver's judgments of another person's attractiveness, age, affect, health/disease status, and even elements of their personality. The crossmodal and multisensory contributions to such effects are reviewed and the limitations/peculiarities of the research that have been published to date are highlighted. At the same time, however, it is important to note that the presence of scent (and/or the absence of malodour) can also influence people's (i.e., a perceiver's) self-confidence which may, in turn, affect how attractive they appear to others. Several potential cognitive mechanisms have been put forward to try and explain such crossmodal/multisensory influences, and some of the neural substrates underpinning these effects have now been characterized. At the end of this narrative review, a number of the potential (and actual) applications for, and implications of, such crossmodal/multisensory phenomena involving olfaction are outlined briefly.Entities:
Keywords: Attraction; Crossmodal; Fragrance; Multisensory; Person perception; Scent
Year: 2021 PMID: 34173932 PMCID: PMC8233629 DOI: 10.1186/s41235-021-00311-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Res Princ Implic ISSN: 2365-7464
Chronological summary of research investigating the crossmodal influence of olfactory stimuli on people's ratings of other people's faces (typically unknown others shown in photos)
| Study | Participants | Olfactory stimuli | Presentation of odorants | Face rating | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotton ( | 24 males and 24 females | Ethyl mercoptan (very −ve) or NO | Between- sessions | Energy and well-being of 2 male and 2 female faces | Ambient malodour only reduced ratings of well-being significantly |
| Cann and Ross ( | 63 males | Between- participants | Attractiveness of 50 female faces | No effect of pleasantness of ambient odour on ratings | |
| Kirk-Smith and Booth ( | ? | Between- participants? | Sexiness of 1/2 naked torsos and softness | ||
| Bensafi et al. ( | 14 females | Floral fragrance (+ve)/NO | Blocked? | 32 female faces rated pleasant or not | Discrete either/or choice and absence of unpleasant odour may help to explain null results |
| Hirsch ( | 37 (males and females) | Pink grapefruit/Grape/Cucumber/NO (Pink grapefruit + vanilla + baby powder) | Between- participants | Age of 20 male and female faces | Only pink grapefruit lowered age, especially for men rating women |
| Demattè et al. ( | 16 females | Geranium and | Trial-by-trial | Attractiveness of 40 male faces | Unpleasant odours lowered attractiveness ratings. No effect of body relevance |
| Li et al. ( | 30 (males and females) | Lemon (+ve)/ ethereal (neutral)/sweat (−ve) | Trial-by-trial | Likability of 80 faces (sex not specified) | Assimilation in non-conscious group, no effect of odour in conscious group |
| Capparuccini et al. ( | 50 males and 50 females | Between- sessions | 10 characteristic of 5 M and 5 F faces (neutral emotion): | Beauty ratings enhanced most by gender congruent (with respect to participant) compared to gender-incongruent scents. No effect for gender neutral ratings (familiarity and confidence) | |
| McGlone et al. ( | 16 females | Trial-by-trial | Attractiveness of 20 male faces | Unpleasant odours sig. lowered ratings relative to NO and +ve fragrance condition | |
| Marinova and Moss ( | 36 females | Between- participants | Attractive, reliable, outgoing, intelligent, wealthy, and socially competent of 15 male faces | Gender-incongruent female perfume lowered attractiveness ratings only for medium attractive men compared to congruent scent | |
| Seubert et al. ( | 6 males and 12 females | 5 odours from 100% fish (−ve) to 100% rose (+ve) | Trial-by-trial | Attractiveness and age of 8 female neutral faces morphed to show more versus less wrinkles and blemishes than comparison | Odour valence affected attractiveness but −ve odour may have distracted in age task |
| Cook et al. ( | 20 (males and females) | Methylmercaptan (−ve)/Jasmine (+ve)/NO | Trial-by-trial | Pleasantness of 18 male and 18 female neutral faces | Pleasant aroma led to higher pleasantness ratings than NO, which, in turn, was higher than for unpleasant rotton cabbage odour |
| Novak et al. ( | 8 males and 8 females | NO/Lilac (+ve) /Sweat (−ve) | Blocked | Emotion of 4 female and 4 male dynamic face stimuli | Null results in this pre-registered study |
| Cook et al. ( | 20–23 (males and females) | Methylmercaptan (−ve)/Jasmine (+ve)/NO | Trial-by-trial | Pleasantness of 30 happy and 30 disgusted male and female faces | The −ve odour significantly lowered pleasantness ratings relative to +ve odour for happy and disgusted faces |
| Cook et al. ( | 26–28 (males and females) | Methylmercaptan (−ve)/Jasmine (+ve)/NO | Trial-by-trial | Pleasantness of 45 male and 45 female neutral faces | Simultaneous presentation of face and −ve odour led to near sig. > reduction in pleasantness of faces than sequential presentation |
| Risso et al. ( | 6 males and 6 females | NO/Liquorice (M) (+ve)/Caramel (F) (+ve) | Trial-by-trial | Attractiveness of 30 male and 30 female faces | Gender-incongruent food odour lowered ratings more than gender-congruent food odour |
M, male; F, female; + ve/neutral/ − ve refers to valence of odour; ?, uncertain; NO, no odour condition
Fig. 1Timeline describing the experimental procedure used in Demattè et al.’s (2007) experiment to demonstrate the crossmodal influence of pleasant versus unpleasant olfactory stimuli on young women’s ratings of men’s faces. Note that the olfactory and visual stimuli were varied randomly on a trial-by-trial basis. Notice also how, like in the majority of other studies of olfactory influences on visual attractiveness, the onset of the olfactory stimulus occurred prior to that of the visual stimulus.
[Reprinted with permission from Demattè et al. (2007, Figure 1)]
Fig. 2Summary of neuroimaging results from McGlone et al.’s (2013) follow-up to Demattè et al.’s (2007) psychophysical study. The graph showing the average (n = 16 participants) percentage BOLD signal change in the peak voxels in both medial and lateral OFC for each of the five experimental conditions. Error bars depict the standard error.
[Reprinted with permission from McGlone et al. (2013, Figure 6).]
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of the experimental paradigm used by Li et al. (2007). Initially, each participant’s odour-detection thresholds were established using an ascending-staircase procedure (not shown). Next, the participants had to sniff a bottle, indicate whether or not it contained an odour, view a face stimulus, and thereafter rate the face in terms of its likeability.
[Redrawn from Li et al. (2007, Figure 1).]
Fig. 4Results of factorial analyses for categorical effects of odours and facial morphing on attractiveness (A) and age (B) and ratings in Seubert et al.’s (2014) study. Ratings were provided on a visual analog scale consisting of 100 sub segments, which in the case of age was anchored at 25 years and 60 years for ecological validity. Error Bars indicate ± 1 SE, asterisks indicate significant differences as revealed by post hoc t tests (* = p 0.05, ** = p 0.01, *** = p 0.001).
[Figure reprinted with permission from Seubert et al. (2014, Figure 3).]
Summary of the most popular explanations that have been put forward to explain the crossmodal influence of olfaction on visual judgments of a person's facial attractiveness (and other attributes of person perception
| Mood-induced changes | Rotton ( |
| People look better/worse when we are in a good/bad mood | |
| Crossmodal affective priming | Demattè et al. ( |
| The valence associated with an olfactory prime can bias people's judgment of the attractiveness/likeability of a subsequently presented visual face | |
| Crossmodal semantic priming | Hirsch ( |
| A familiar scent may be associated with someone of a certain age, and this form of semantic priming may bias judgments of a person's age | |
| Crossmodal gender congruence | Capparuccini et al. ( |
| The presentation of a gender-congruent (pleasant) fragrance may sometimes boost attractiveness, as a result of semantic priming and/or based on crossmodal correspondences | |
| Halo-dumping | Demattè et al. ( |
| People may rate photos as more attractive in presence of pleasant olfactory stimulus only because they have no way to indicate what they think about the olfactory stimulus. (This account ultimately rejected.) | |
| Olfactorily induced change in arousal | Bensafi et al. ( |
| Olfactory stimuli may influence a person's level of (sexual) arousal, and this, in turn, may influence their rating of other people | |
Fig. 5Ratings of own and assigned perfume-body odour blends in Lenochová et al. (2012, Study 3). Z-scored mean ratings (6 SEM) of attractiveness, pleasantness and intensity of perfume-body odour blends in individual male odour donors and for all donors together. Empty bars signify own and preferred perfume while shaded bars represent randomly assigned perfume combined with donor’s individual body odour.
[Figure reprinted with permission from Lenchová et al. (2012, Figure 4). 10.1371/journal.pone.0033810.g004.]