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The perception of odor pleasantness is shared across cultures
ArticleAbstract: Humans share sensory systems with a common anatomical blueprint, but individual sensory experience nPalabras claves:cross-cultural, cultural relativity, hunter-gatherer, odor perception, Odor pleasantness, Physicochemical, subsistence, universal, valenceAutores:Arshamian A., Garrido Rodriguez G., Gerkin R.C., Kruspe N., Lundström J.N., Mainland J.D., Majid A., O'Meara C., Simeon Floyd, Wnuk E.Fuentes:googlescopusSmell Is Coded in Grammar and Frequent in Discourse: Cha'palaa Olfactory Language in Cross-Linguistic Perspective
ArticleAbstract: It has long been claimed that there is no lexical field of smell, and that smell is of too little vaPalabras claves:Cha'palaa, ENGLISH, Imbabura Quechua, olfaction, sensory anthropologyAutores:Floyd S., Lila San Roque, Majid A.Fuentes:scopusUniversal meaning extensions of perception verbs are grounded in interaction
ArticleAbstract: Apart from references to perception, words such as see and listen have shared, non-literal meaningsPalabras claves:conversation, discourse marker, DIVERSITY, perception verb, Polysemy, semantics, socialityAutores:Elisabeth J. Norcliffe, Kendrick K.H., Lila San Roque, Majid A.Fuentes:scopus