The effect of lateral presentation of odours on the hedonic evaluation is reported using a range of different substances. The hypothesis that hedonic evaluation of odours depends on stimulated nostril and on gender and handedness is tested using psychophysical methodology. A total of 51 untrained subjects evaluated 16 substances with different hedonic valences. Each odour substance was presented to the subjects four times, twice at each nostril using a balanced experimental design. Effects of gender and handedness, and interactions, are observed. Some parallels with the perception of visual emotional stimuli are suggested. Hedonic processing of odour stimuli is concluded to be an emotional, rather than an analytical task.</p
Gender is important for the determination of olfactory abilities. Previous reports on gender differe...
The perception of smell is dominated by an hedonic dimension, with changes in left and right orbitof...
Most studies on perception of human social odors in axillary sweat do not distinguish between sample...
The effect of lateral presentation of odours on the hedonic evaluation is reported using a range of ...
International audienceOdor hedonic evaluation (pleasant/unpleasant) is considered as the first and o...
International audienceThe present study sought to examine the differential processing of pleasant, n...
International audienceThe objective of the present study was to investigate interactions between odo...
The right hemisphere has traditionally been considered as dominant in odor and emotion perception, w...
Olfactory perception is characterized by interpersonal variability. Although gender has been identif...
A long-standing debate in olfactory perception is whether hedonic responses to odors are learned or ...
International audienceThe study of olfactory lateralisation in humans has given rise to many publica...
In everyday life, the emotional perception often occurred in different modalities at once but knowle...
International audienceVolatile compounds can reach olfactory epithelium though the nose (orthonasal ...
Most studies on perception of human social odors in axillary sweat do not distinguish between sample...
Research on hemispheric lateralization of olfactory processes is limited and inconclusive. Right-nos...
Gender is important for the determination of olfactory abilities. Previous reports on gender differe...
The perception of smell is dominated by an hedonic dimension, with changes in left and right orbitof...
Most studies on perception of human social odors in axillary sweat do not distinguish between sample...
The effect of lateral presentation of odours on the hedonic evaluation is reported using a range of ...
International audienceOdor hedonic evaluation (pleasant/unpleasant) is considered as the first and o...
International audienceThe present study sought to examine the differential processing of pleasant, n...
International audienceThe objective of the present study was to investigate interactions between odo...
The right hemisphere has traditionally been considered as dominant in odor and emotion perception, w...
Olfactory perception is characterized by interpersonal variability. Although gender has been identif...
A long-standing debate in olfactory perception is whether hedonic responses to odors are learned or ...
International audienceThe study of olfactory lateralisation in humans has given rise to many publica...
In everyday life, the emotional perception often occurred in different modalities at once but knowle...
International audienceVolatile compounds can reach olfactory epithelium though the nose (orthonasal ...
Most studies on perception of human social odors in axillary sweat do not distinguish between sample...
Research on hemispheric lateralization of olfactory processes is limited and inconclusive. Right-nos...
Gender is important for the determination of olfactory abilities. Previous reports on gender differe...
The perception of smell is dominated by an hedonic dimension, with changes in left and right orbitof...
Most studies on perception of human social odors in axillary sweat do not distinguish between sample...