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Olfactory Cues Modulate
 Facial Attractiveness
 Demattè, Österbauer, & Spence
             2007
Bell Ringer
• Which of your senses do you use to
  acknowledge the attractiveness of a
  person? List and explain how you use
  each of the senses you listed.
Background
• Facial Attractiveness according to our
  sense of vision has to do with facial
  symmetry
• How much the average face conforms to
  the average prototype.
Background
• Attractiveness is not just dependent on the
  vision but is often adjusted by other sensory
  cues
  – Voices have been shown to influence a person’s
    perceived attractiveness

• Olfactory cues (smell) also play an
  important role in nonverbal communication
  – A significant positive correlation found between the
    rated sexiness of a man’s body odor & his facial
    attractiveness to females
Background
• Woman’s preference for the scent of some males
  has been shown to change with her menstrual
  cycle
  • Smelly Boys…..
AIM
• To investigate whether olfactory cues can
  influence people’s judgments of facial
  attractiveness
HYPOTHESIS
• A pleasant versus unpleasant odor can
  modulate female participants’ ratings of
  the perceived attractiveness of briefly
  presented male faces
Method/Procedure
• 16 female volunteers
  – The University of Oxford
  – Age 20 to 34, M=24
  – Completed a questionnaire ensure that they
    had a normal sense of smell, no history of
    olfactory dysfunction, & normal vision
    • Chose women because previous research has
      suggested that females may be more sensitive to
      the effects of olfactory cues than are males
Method/Procedure
• Forty male faces for visual stimuli
  – From a standardized database
  – Extensively characterized for attractiveness &
    categorized into high, medium, & low attractiveness
  – 20 faces from each of the high & low groups
• Four odors (2 male & 2 non-male) & clean air
  – 2 pleasant odors: geranium & male cologne ‘‘Gravity”
  – 2 unpleasant odors: male body odor & rubber
• A custom-built computer-controlled
  olfactometer was used to deliver the odorants
Method/Procedure
• Laboratory experiment
  – Repeated measures design
• IV= Pleasant odors, unpleasant odors,
  neutral odors
• DV=Modulation of female participants’
  ratings of the perceived attractiveness of
  male faces
Bell Ringer
• The Human Face
• How much of beauty do you think is
  socially constructed? In other words, how
  much of beauty is what we are told is
  beautiful?
Method/Procedure
• 3 blocks of 40 random trials (each person
  completed 120 trials)
  – Each face was randomly presented 3 times
    during each session
     • Once with a pleasant odor
     • Once with an unpleasant odor
     • Once with a neutral odor (i.e., clean air)
Method/Procedure
• Participant sat staring at a computer with their
  chins on a chin rest
• They were told to look at a fixation mark on the
  screen
• They were to exhale through their nostrils when
  they heard a quiet tone and inhale when they
  heard a louder tone and which point an odor was
  released
• They had to indicate if an odor had been released
  or not using the keyboard
• 1 second later one of the faces appeared for ½
  second in the center of the screen
• As soon as the face disappeared the odor stopped
  and clean air was delivered.
• The screen then turned black
Method/Procedure
• Then a 9-point rating scale appeared and
  the participants were to rate the perceived
  attractiveness of the face that they had just
  seen
• 1 (least attractive) to 9 (most attractive)
  – What is this called?
• As soon as they made their rating, clean
  air was delivered and the next trial started
Method/Procedure
• At the end each participant was asked to smell
  the odors individually & to rate each odor on
  several different dimensions use a pen and paper
  Labeled Magnitude Scale (LMS) from 0-100.
  – odor intensity
  – odor pleasantness
  – odor familiarity
• The order of presentation of the odors and the
  scales was randomized between participants
Labeled
Magnitude
Scale
Method/Procedure
• In order to counterbalance the
  presentation of each face/odor
  combination, the entire set of 40 faces was
  divided into 4 groups of 10 faces each (5
  high attractiveness & 5 low attractiveness)
  with close to the same mean
  attractiveness.
  – Each group of faces was then presented with 1
    different possible combination of pleasant–
    unpleasant odors, counterbalanced across
    participants.
Reflective
• Read the following article What Influence
  Does Smell Have on Attractiveness?
Bell Ringer
• The scent of attraction
Method/Procedure
• So each participant rated
  1. 10 faces presented with clean air, the geranium odor,
     & the body odor during the experiment.
  2. 10 faces with clean air, the male perfume, & the
     rubber odor
  3. 10 faces with clean air, geranium odor, & the rubber
     odor
  4. 10 faces clean air, the male perfume, & the body odor.
     • The same odor was never presented to participants on
       consecutive trials.
     • The experiment lasted for approximately 50 min in total.
Results/Findings
• The faces were found significantly less
  attractive when presented together with an
  unpleasant odor than when presented with
  either a pleasant odor or with the neutral
  clean air
  – Didn’t matter if the odor was body relevant
• There was no significant difference
  between pleasant versus neutral clean air
• Adds to a growing list of studies demonstrating
  that the presence of olfactory cues can exert a
  small but significant cross-modal influence on
  people’s judgments of a variety of non-olfactory
  stimulus attributes/qualities (Smell matters)
  – Adds to previous evidence that shows that the
    presence of fragrance cues can influence people’s
    evaluation of job applicants
  – Would be interesting to see what happens under more
    ecologically valid conditions
Strengths/Weaknesses
• Strengths
  – Controlled
  – Counterbalanced to control for order effects
  – Replicable

• Weaknesses
  –   Generalization (population/sample)
  –   Demand characteristics
  –   Halo dumping
  –   Validity (ecological, construct)
Evaluation
• Construct validity? Yes
  – A link could be established between the face & the
    smell because the technique used presented them as a
    single stimulus & cross-modal (perceptions involving
    2 senses) interactions were checked
  – Presentations of the odors were brief so the influence
    of the odors on mood didn’t interfere with face
    preferences
  – Trials were randomized so the effects could be
    attributed to the smells, not order effects (practice or
    fatigue)
Evaluation
• Construct validity? No
  – The unpleasant smells may have distracted
    the participants’ attention causing them to
    find the faces less attractive rather than
    affecting perception of the face
  – The participants might have been halo
    dumping
Evaluation
• Were the effects due to a halo-dumping?
  – Can occur whenever the appropriate response
    alternative for a relevant attribute is
    unavailable to participants. This can lead
    participants to ‘dump’ the values for a relevant
    attribute that is not available in the range of
    alternative response scales provided
     • So they describe a smell as sweet when it is really
       vanilla
     • In this case they might have been expressing their
       like or dislike of the odor on the attractiveness
       scale
        – Possible as they only had one scale to use, so couldn’t
          separate their evaluations
Evaluation
• Demattè et al say no
  – the participants in the study had to perform
    an odor detection task at the beginning of
    each trial, meaning that odor and visual
    information were responded to as 2 distinct
    and individuated
  – ‘‘Attractiveness’’ is a clear, natural, & easy
    characteristic to consider when rating human
    faces, so it is unlikely that the participants had
    doubts concerning which variable they were
    supposed to rate in the task

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How Smell Impacts Facial Attractiveness Ratings

  • 1. Olfactory Cues Modulate Facial Attractiveness Demattè, Österbauer, & Spence 2007
  • 2. Bell Ringer • Which of your senses do you use to acknowledge the attractiveness of a person? List and explain how you use each of the senses you listed.
  • 3. Background • Facial Attractiveness according to our sense of vision has to do with facial symmetry • How much the average face conforms to the average prototype.
  • 4. Background • Attractiveness is not just dependent on the vision but is often adjusted by other sensory cues – Voices have been shown to influence a person’s perceived attractiveness • Olfactory cues (smell) also play an important role in nonverbal communication – A significant positive correlation found between the rated sexiness of a man’s body odor & his facial attractiveness to females
  • 5. Background • Woman’s preference for the scent of some males has been shown to change with her menstrual cycle • Smelly Boys…..
  • 6. AIM • To investigate whether olfactory cues can influence people’s judgments of facial attractiveness
  • 7. HYPOTHESIS • A pleasant versus unpleasant odor can modulate female participants’ ratings of the perceived attractiveness of briefly presented male faces
  • 8. Method/Procedure • 16 female volunteers – The University of Oxford – Age 20 to 34, M=24 – Completed a questionnaire ensure that they had a normal sense of smell, no history of olfactory dysfunction, & normal vision • Chose women because previous research has suggested that females may be more sensitive to the effects of olfactory cues than are males
  • 9. Method/Procedure • Forty male faces for visual stimuli – From a standardized database – Extensively characterized for attractiveness & categorized into high, medium, & low attractiveness – 20 faces from each of the high & low groups • Four odors (2 male & 2 non-male) & clean air – 2 pleasant odors: geranium & male cologne ‘‘Gravity” – 2 unpleasant odors: male body odor & rubber • A custom-built computer-controlled olfactometer was used to deliver the odorants
  • 10. Method/Procedure • Laboratory experiment – Repeated measures design • IV= Pleasant odors, unpleasant odors, neutral odors • DV=Modulation of female participants’ ratings of the perceived attractiveness of male faces
  • 11. Bell Ringer • The Human Face • How much of beauty do you think is socially constructed? In other words, how much of beauty is what we are told is beautiful?
  • 12. Method/Procedure • 3 blocks of 40 random trials (each person completed 120 trials) – Each face was randomly presented 3 times during each session • Once with a pleasant odor • Once with an unpleasant odor • Once with a neutral odor (i.e., clean air)
  • 13. Method/Procedure • Participant sat staring at a computer with their chins on a chin rest • They were told to look at a fixation mark on the screen • They were to exhale through their nostrils when they heard a quiet tone and inhale when they heard a louder tone and which point an odor was released • They had to indicate if an odor had been released or not using the keyboard • 1 second later one of the faces appeared for ½ second in the center of the screen • As soon as the face disappeared the odor stopped and clean air was delivered. • The screen then turned black
  • 14. Method/Procedure • Then a 9-point rating scale appeared and the participants were to rate the perceived attractiveness of the face that they had just seen • 1 (least attractive) to 9 (most attractive) – What is this called? • As soon as they made their rating, clean air was delivered and the next trial started
  • 15. Method/Procedure • At the end each participant was asked to smell the odors individually & to rate each odor on several different dimensions use a pen and paper Labeled Magnitude Scale (LMS) from 0-100. – odor intensity – odor pleasantness – odor familiarity • The order of presentation of the odors and the scales was randomized between participants
  • 17. Method/Procedure • In order to counterbalance the presentation of each face/odor combination, the entire set of 40 faces was divided into 4 groups of 10 faces each (5 high attractiveness & 5 low attractiveness) with close to the same mean attractiveness. – Each group of faces was then presented with 1 different possible combination of pleasant– unpleasant odors, counterbalanced across participants.
  • 18. Reflective • Read the following article What Influence Does Smell Have on Attractiveness?
  • 19. Bell Ringer • The scent of attraction
  • 20. Method/Procedure • So each participant rated 1. 10 faces presented with clean air, the geranium odor, & the body odor during the experiment. 2. 10 faces with clean air, the male perfume, & the rubber odor 3. 10 faces with clean air, geranium odor, & the rubber odor 4. 10 faces clean air, the male perfume, & the body odor. • The same odor was never presented to participants on consecutive trials. • The experiment lasted for approximately 50 min in total.
  • 21. Results/Findings • The faces were found significantly less attractive when presented together with an unpleasant odor than when presented with either a pleasant odor or with the neutral clean air – Didn’t matter if the odor was body relevant • There was no significant difference between pleasant versus neutral clean air
  • 22. • Adds to a growing list of studies demonstrating that the presence of olfactory cues can exert a small but significant cross-modal influence on people’s judgments of a variety of non-olfactory stimulus attributes/qualities (Smell matters) – Adds to previous evidence that shows that the presence of fragrance cues can influence people’s evaluation of job applicants – Would be interesting to see what happens under more ecologically valid conditions
  • 23. Strengths/Weaknesses • Strengths – Controlled – Counterbalanced to control for order effects – Replicable • Weaknesses – Generalization (population/sample) – Demand characteristics – Halo dumping – Validity (ecological, construct)
  • 24. Evaluation • Construct validity? Yes – A link could be established between the face & the smell because the technique used presented them as a single stimulus & cross-modal (perceptions involving 2 senses) interactions were checked – Presentations of the odors were brief so the influence of the odors on mood didn’t interfere with face preferences – Trials were randomized so the effects could be attributed to the smells, not order effects (practice or fatigue)
  • 25. Evaluation • Construct validity? No – The unpleasant smells may have distracted the participants’ attention causing them to find the faces less attractive rather than affecting perception of the face – The participants might have been halo dumping
  • 26. Evaluation • Were the effects due to a halo-dumping? – Can occur whenever the appropriate response alternative for a relevant attribute is unavailable to participants. This can lead participants to ‘dump’ the values for a relevant attribute that is not available in the range of alternative response scales provided • So they describe a smell as sweet when it is really vanilla • In this case they might have been expressing their like or dislike of the odor on the attractiveness scale – Possible as they only had one scale to use, so couldn’t separate their evaluations
  • 27. Evaluation • Demattè et al say no – the participants in the study had to perform an odor detection task at the beginning of each trial, meaning that odor and visual information were responded to as 2 distinct and individuated – ‘‘Attractiveness’’ is a clear, natural, & easy characteristic to consider when rating human faces, so it is unlikely that the participants had doubts concerning which variable they were supposed to rate in the task