Implicit memory for odors: a possible method for observation

Perceptual and Motor Skills
J Degel, E P Köster

Abstract

In an experiment 143 subjects were instructed to assign odors to contexts which were displayed in a slide session. The slides depicted contexts from three areas of everyday life which partly contained visual cues related to a presented odor. After rating the fit of each odor to a context, the subjects rated the odors for pleasantness. Analysis showed a strong influence of the visual cue on the rating of fit for the contexts containing an odor-related visual element. In contexts without a visual cue, rating of fit showed an influence of implicitly learned memories of odor. The rating was not affected by the pleasantness of the odors. The 1995 work of Schab and Crowder is critically reviewed, and results are discussed within the framework of new, more ecologically oriented research on memory for odor.

References

May 1, 1990·Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance·D A Zellner, M A Kautz
Jul 1, 1981·Perception & Psychophysics·R G Davis

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Citations

Feb 13, 2003·Perceptual and Motor Skills·Hendrik N J Schifferstein, Anne M K Miciiaut
Sep 9, 2008·Infant Behavior & Development·Karine DurandBenoist Schaal

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