The perception of odor pleasantness is shared across cultures


Abstract:

Humans share sensory systems with a common anatomical blueprint, but individual sensory experience nevertheless varies. In olfaction, it is not known to what degree sensory perception, particularly the perception of odor pleasantness, is founded on universal principles,1–5 dictated by culture,6–13 or merely a matter of personal taste.6,8–10,12,14 To address this, we asked 225 individuals from 9 diverse nonwestern cultures—hunter-gatherer to urban dwelling—to rank the monomolecular odorants from most to least pleasant. Contrary to expectations, culture explained only 6% of the variance in pleasantness rankings, whereas individual variability or personal taste explained 54%. Importantly, there was substantial global consistency, with molecular identity explaining 41% of the variance in odor pleasantness rankings. Critically, these universal rankings were predicted by the physicochemical properties of out-of-sample molecules and out-of-sample pleasantness ratings given by a tenth group of western urban participants. Taken together, this shows human olfactory perception is strongly constrained by universal principles.

Año de publicación:

2022

Keywords:

  • Odor pleasantness
  • odor perception
  • Physicochemical
  • cultural relativity
  • subsistence
  • hunter-gatherer
  • cross-cultural
  • universal
  • valence

Fuente:

scopusscopus
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Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Cognición
  • Percepción

Áreas temáticas de Dewey:

  • Cultura e instituciones
  • Costumbres, etiqueta y folclore
  • Bioquímica
Procesado con IAProcesado con IA

Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible:

  • ODS 3: Salud y bienestar
  • ODS 10: Reducción de las desigualdades
  • ODS 17: Alianzas para lograr los objetivos
Procesado con IAProcesado con IA