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Influence of color on odor identification and liking ratings.

162

Citations

19

References

1991

Year

TLDR

The study tested odor identification under color‑appropriate, color‑inappropriate, and blindfolded conditions. Subjects made fewer errors, responded faster, and reported higher liking when odors were presented in their typical, color‑appropriate combinations, showing that color facilitates identification and that accurate identification enhances pleasantness.

Abstract

The effects of color on odor identification were tested under color appropriate, inappropriate, and blindfolded conditions. Subjects made fewer errors in identifying solutions that were colored appropriately (e.g., red-cherry) than in either the blindfolded condition, where there were no color cues, or the inappropriate color condition (e.g., red-lemon). Identification accuracy was greatest for typical odor-color combinations (e.g., red-cherry) compared with appropriate but nontypical odor-color combinations (e.g., red-watermelon). Response latencies were fastest for odors in the appropriately colored solutions. Subjects also rated appropriate color-odor combinations as most pleasant. However, this effect is probably due to the increase in identification accuracy of the appropriately colored solutions. In all three conditions, correctly identified odors were liked more than odors that were not correctly identified. Thus, color is an important perceptual variable in odor identification because it biases subjects toward a color category that facilitates identification if the color is "correct". This ability to identify an odor in turn influences the affective response to the odor.

References

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