What you smell affects different components of your visual attention.
Chen-An li, Su-Ling Yeh

Last modified: 2011-09-02

Abstract


It is commonly held that different essential oils produce different effects, as reflected in various commercial advertisements. Yet, little is known about whether smelling essential oils would affect our attention and whether smelling different essential oils affects attentional components differently, due to the lack of empirical data. Here we provide such data. Participants conducted the Attention Network Test (ANT) while smelling the essential oil of Chamaecyparis formosensis (Experiment 1, the wood usually used in shrine or furniture ) or Eucalyptus globules (Experiment 2, smelling like camphor or mint), compared with the control condition of smelling water. The order of the essential oil condition and the water condition was counterbalanced between participants. Three attention systems were measured: alertness, orienting and executive control. Results showed that Chamaecyparis formosens reduced the effect of orienting, implying that smelling this odor would prevent involuntary attentional shift by an exogenous cue. On the other hand, Eucalyptus globules produced a larger interference effect in the executive control system, suggesting a larger span of spatial attention that is associated with a positive emotion(Rowe, Hirsh, & Anderson, 2007).

References


Rowe, G., Hirsh, J., & Anderson, A. (2007). Positive affect increases the breadth of attentional selection. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 104(1), 383.

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