Crossmodal Associations Between Olfaction and Vision: Color and Shape Visualizations of Odors

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Crossmodal Associations Between Olfaction and Vision: Color and Shape Visualizations of Odors. / Kaeppler, Kathrin.
in: Chemosensory Perception, Jahrgang 11, Nr. 2, 01.10.2018, S. 95-111.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{18969719a2ba40859986c297834b9899,
title = "Crossmodal Associations Between Olfaction and Vision: Color and Shape Visualizations of Odors",
abstract = "Introduction: In the present study, we assessed crossmodal associations between odors and both color and shape, with particular interest in the principles beneath these mappings. We hypothesized that visual associations of odors would primarily reflect observable features of a smelling object and thus vary with different source assumptions of the very same smell. Methods: We asked 30 participants to visualize their odor associations on a drawing tablet, freely deciding on color and shape. Additionally, subjects provided ratings on perceptual and shape-related dimensions as well as a verbal label for each sample. Results: With respect to color selection, the results confirmed a source-based mapping approach: odors rated as familiar were associated with very particular colors that typically resembled the appearance of their source. For less familiar odors, color selection was rather inconsistent but still then went along with assumed odor objects. Shape ratings changed with odor identifications as well, but considerably less than for color associations. Shape ratings and shape drawings produced very different results. While shape ratings were unlikely rooted in the mental imagery of a shape, drawings frequently displayed concrete objects that depended on odor label. Conclusions: Results confirm the existence of stable odor–vision correspondences and suggest that language plays a major part in mediating these mappings. The frequently assumed hedonic foundation of crossmodal matchings could not be confirmed for this stimuli set. Implications: Odor sensations may trigger odor naming spontaneously. Assumptions about an odor{\textquoteright}s identity, as well as the multisensory knowledge we have acquired on it, affect the visual associations of an odor.",
keywords = "Color, Crossmodal associations, Crossmodal correspondences, Odor, Olfaction, Shape, Business psychology",
author = "Kathrin Kaeppler",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s12078-018-9245-y",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "95--111",
journal = "Chemosensory Perception",
issn = "1936-5802",
publisher = "Springer New York LLC",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Crossmodal Associations Between Olfaction and Vision

T2 - Color and Shape Visualizations of Odors

AU - Kaeppler, Kathrin

PY - 2018/10/1

Y1 - 2018/10/1

N2 - Introduction: In the present study, we assessed crossmodal associations between odors and both color and shape, with particular interest in the principles beneath these mappings. We hypothesized that visual associations of odors would primarily reflect observable features of a smelling object and thus vary with different source assumptions of the very same smell. Methods: We asked 30 participants to visualize their odor associations on a drawing tablet, freely deciding on color and shape. Additionally, subjects provided ratings on perceptual and shape-related dimensions as well as a verbal label for each sample. Results: With respect to color selection, the results confirmed a source-based mapping approach: odors rated as familiar were associated with very particular colors that typically resembled the appearance of their source. For less familiar odors, color selection was rather inconsistent but still then went along with assumed odor objects. Shape ratings changed with odor identifications as well, but considerably less than for color associations. Shape ratings and shape drawings produced very different results. While shape ratings were unlikely rooted in the mental imagery of a shape, drawings frequently displayed concrete objects that depended on odor label. Conclusions: Results confirm the existence of stable odor–vision correspondences and suggest that language plays a major part in mediating these mappings. The frequently assumed hedonic foundation of crossmodal matchings could not be confirmed for this stimuli set. Implications: Odor sensations may trigger odor naming spontaneously. Assumptions about an odor’s identity, as well as the multisensory knowledge we have acquired on it, affect the visual associations of an odor.

AB - Introduction: In the present study, we assessed crossmodal associations between odors and both color and shape, with particular interest in the principles beneath these mappings. We hypothesized that visual associations of odors would primarily reflect observable features of a smelling object and thus vary with different source assumptions of the very same smell. Methods: We asked 30 participants to visualize their odor associations on a drawing tablet, freely deciding on color and shape. Additionally, subjects provided ratings on perceptual and shape-related dimensions as well as a verbal label for each sample. Results: With respect to color selection, the results confirmed a source-based mapping approach: odors rated as familiar were associated with very particular colors that typically resembled the appearance of their source. For less familiar odors, color selection was rather inconsistent but still then went along with assumed odor objects. Shape ratings changed with odor identifications as well, but considerably less than for color associations. Shape ratings and shape drawings produced very different results. While shape ratings were unlikely rooted in the mental imagery of a shape, drawings frequently displayed concrete objects that depended on odor label. Conclusions: Results confirm the existence of stable odor–vision correspondences and suggest that language plays a major part in mediating these mappings. The frequently assumed hedonic foundation of crossmodal matchings could not be confirmed for this stimuli set. Implications: Odor sensations may trigger odor naming spontaneously. Assumptions about an odor’s identity, as well as the multisensory knowledge we have acquired on it, affect the visual associations of an odor.

KW - Color

KW - Crossmodal associations

KW - Crossmodal correspondences

KW - Odor

KW - Olfaction

KW - Shape

KW - Business psychology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85044444343&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s12078-018-9245-y

DO - 10.1007/s12078-018-9245-y

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:85044444343

VL - 11

SP - 95

EP - 111

JO - Chemosensory Perception

JF - Chemosensory Perception

SN - 1936-5802

IS - 2

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Psychological success factors of entrepreneurship in Africa
  2. Teaching content and language in the multilingual classroom
  3. "Sonic Fiction" - Zum Begreifen musikalisch-medialer Gestaltung
  4. Exporter performance in the German business services sector
  5. Wilhelm von Bode und das Asiatische Museum in Berlin Dahlem
  6. PROPERTY / EIGENTUM: Thematic Issue of "Texte zur Kunst", Nr. 117
  7. Soil [N] modulates soil C cycling in CO2-fumigated tree stands
  8. Comparing the research-practice gap in management accounting
  9. Process simulation of friction extrusion of aluminum alloys
  10. Über Kritikpotenziale und blinde Flecken der Rechtsdogmatik
  11. Nachhaltigkeitskommunikation: Vom Rauschen zur Rückbesinnung
  12. Inklusive Basiskompetenzen in den Fachdidaktiken entwickeln
  13. Qualitätsstandards und Transparenz in der Quartären Bildung
  14. Finanzierungspraxis von Biogasanlagen in der Landwirtschaft
  15. Business cases and corporate engagement with sustainability
  16. Group formation in computer-supported collaborative learning
  17. Kritik als Urteilskraft - wenn Trolle postkritisch nachahmen
  18. Preserving Colias myrmidone in European cultural landscapes
  19. Globalization and the societal consensus of wealth tax cuts
  20. Stand und Herausforderungen der Bürgerenergie in Deutschland
  21. Polyfluoroalkyl compounds in the East Greenland Arctic Ocean
  22. Polizei und Jugendliche in der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik
  23. Wildnisgebiete-Möglichkeitsräume für nachhaltige Entwicklung?
  24. Biodiversität im unternehmerischen Nachhaltigkeitsmanagement
  25. Aufbau und Führung von Nachhaltigkeitsmarken in Social Media
  26. Corporate contributions to the Sustainable Development Goals
  27. Pädagogik und Zwang, Minderjährigenrechte und Freiheitsschutz