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Affective dimensions of odor perception: A comparison between Swiss, British, and Singaporean populations.
113
Citations
44
References
2011
Year
Affective VariableSocial PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceEducationCultural FactorUnited KingdomPerceptionSensory ScienceSocial SciencesPsychologyAffective ScienceEmotional ResponseOlfactory PerceptionAffective ComputingGeneva EmotionSensometricsSingaporean PopulationsPerception SystemCognitive ScienceOdor PerceptionCultureOdor ScaleCross-cultural PerspectiveAffective DimensionsEmotionCultural Psychology
Do affective responses to odors vary as a function of culture? To address this question, we developed two self-report scales in the United Kingdom (Liverpool: LEOS) and in Singapore (city of Singapore: SEOS), following the same procedure as used in the past to develop the Geneva Emotion and Odor Scale (GEOS: Chrea, Grandjean, Delplanque et al., 2009). The final scales were obtained by a three-step reduction of an initial pool of 480 affective terms, retaining only the most relevant terms to describe odor-related subjective affective states and comprised of six (GEOS) or seven affective dimensions (LEOS and SEOS). These included dimensions that were common to the three cultures (Disgust, Happiness Well-being, Sensuality Desire, and Energy), common to the two European samples (Soothing Peacefulness), and dimensions that were culture specific (Sensory Pleasure in Geneva; Nostalgia and Hunger Thirst in Liverpool; Intellectual Stimulation, Spirituality, and Negative Feelings in Singapore). A comparative approach showed that the dimensional organization of odor-related affective terms in a given culture better explained data variability for that culture than data variability for the other cultures, thus highlighting the importance of culture-specific tools in the investigation of odor-related affect.
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