A fruity note: crossmodal associations between odors and musical notes.

Anne-Sylvie Crisinel, Charles Spence

Crossmodal Research Laboratory, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, UK.

Journal Article: Chemical Senses (impact factor: 3.03). 08/2011; 37(2):151-8. DOI: 10.1093/chemse/bjr085

Abstract

Odors are notoriously difficult to describe, but they seem prone to a variety of crossmodal associations. In the present study, we generalize the previously-shown association between odors (from perfumery) and pitch (Belkin et al. 1997) to odors related to food and drink (in this case those associated with wine). We also demonstrate that, to a lesser extent (25% of the odor tested), participants preferentially match specific odors to certain types of instruments. The ratings of the odors along a number of dimensions are used in principal components analysis (PCA) to explore the psychological dimensions underlying the odor-pitch associations. The results demonstrate that both pleasantness and complexity, but not intensity, appear to play a role when choosing a pitch to match an odor. Our results suggest that these features of odor stimuli constitute psychological dimensions that can be consistently matched to auditory features.

Source: PubMed

Comments on this publication

ResearchGate members can add comments. Sign up now and post your comment!

Science & Research Jobs

Keywords

auditory features
 
certain types
 
crossmodal associations
 
dimensions
 
features
 
instruments
 
lesser extent
 
odor tested
 
odor-pitch associations
 
odors
 
participants preferentially match specific odors
 
pleasantness
 
previously-shown association
 
principal components analysis
 
psychological dimensions
 
ratings