Pleasantness and trigeminal sensations as salient dimensions in organizing the semantic and physiological spaces of odors

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Abstract

A major issue in human olfaction research is to characterize the main dimensions that organize the space of odors. The present study examines this question and shows that, beside pleasantness, trigeminal sensations, and particularly irritation, play an important role. These results were consistent along two different spaces constructed using semantic description and physiological responses to 105 odorants, smelled and described by human participants. Taken together, these findings suggest that salient trigeminal features, in conjunction with pleasantness, are involved in detecting relevant emotional stimuli, and modify the way organisms categorize smells. These results shed light on the importance of trigeminal sensitivity in the well-established defensive function of olfaction.

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Licon, C. C., Manesse, C., Dantec, M., Fournel, A., & Bensafi, M. (2018). Pleasantness and trigeminal sensations as salient dimensions in organizing the semantic and physiological spaces of odors. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-26510-5

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