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Affective dimensions of odor perception: a comparison between Swiss, British, and Singaporean populations
Authors:Ferdenzi Camille  Schirmer Annett  Roberts S Craig  Delplanque Sylvain  Porcherot Christelle  Cayeux Isabelle  Velazco Maria-Inès  Sander David  Scherer Klaus R  Grandjean Didier
Affiliation:Swiss Center for Affective Sciences-University of Geneva, 7 rue des battoirs, 1205 Geneva, Switzerland. camille.ferdenzi@unige.ch
Abstract: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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