Literature DB >> 6242742

Odor recognition: familiarity, identifiability, and encoding consistency.

M D Rabin, W S Cain.   

Abstract

The investigation examined the association between the perceived identity of odorous stimuli and the ability to recognize the previous occurrence of them. The stimuli comprised 20 relatively familiar odorous objects such as chocolate, leather, popcorn, and soy sauce. Participants rated the familiarity of the odors and sought to identify them. At various intervals up to 7 days after initial inspection, the participants sought to recognize the odors among sets of distractor odors that included such items as soap, cloves, pipe tobacco, and so on. The recognition response entailed a confidence rating as to whether or not an item had appeared in the original set. At the time of testing, the participants also sought to identify the stimuli again. The results upheld previous findings of excellent initial recognition memory for environmentally relevant odors and slow forgetting. The results also uncovered, for the first time, a strong association between recognition memory and identifiability, rated familiarity, and the ability to use an odor label consistently at inspection and subsequent testing. Encodability seems to enhance rather than to permit recognizability. Even items identified incorrectly or inconsistently were recognized at levels above chance.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6242742     DOI: 10.1037//0278-7393.10.2.316

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn        ISSN: 0278-7393            Impact factor:   3.051


  24 in total

1.  Verbal coding in olfactory versus nonolfactory cognition.

Authors:  R S Herz
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2000-09

2.  Genetic and environmental influences on odor identification ability in the very old.

Authors:  Richard L Doty; Inge Petersen; Nii Mensah; Kaare Christensen
Journal:  Psychol Aging       Date:  2011-05-30

3.  Odor memory: Review and analysis.

Authors:  R S Herz; T Engen
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  1996-09

4.  Olfactory working memory: effects of verbalization on the 2-back task.

Authors:  Fredrik U Jönsson; Per Møller; Mats J Olsson
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2011-08

5.  An auditory analog of the picture superiority effect.

Authors:  Robert J Crutcher; Jenay M Beer
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2011-01

6.  A designated odor-language integration system in the human brain.

Authors:  Jonas K Olofsson; Robert S Hurley; Nicholas E Bowman; Xiaojun Bao; M-Marsel Mesulam; Jay A Gottfried
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-11-05       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  Experience facilitates olfactory quality discrimination.

Authors:  M D Rabin
Journal:  Percept Psychophys       Date:  1988-12

8.  The role of sparsely distributed representations in familiarity recognition of verbal and olfactory materials.

Authors:  Sverker Sikström; Johan Hellman; Mats Dahl; Georg Stenberg; Marcus Johansson
Journal:  Cogn Process       Date:  2018-04-20

9.  The influence of semantic processing on odor identification ability in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Vidyulata Kamath; Bruce I Turetsky; Sarah C Seligman; Dana M Marchetto; Jeffrey B Walker; Paul J Moberg
Journal:  Arch Clin Neuropsychol       Date:  2013-03-28       Impact factor: 2.813

10.  Familiarity influences odor memory stability.

Authors:  Richard J Stevenson; Mehmet K Mahmut
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2013-08
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