Global Study of Social Odor Awareness

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Date

2018

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford Univ Press

Open Access Color

HYBRID

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

7

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6

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No
Impulse
Top 10%
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Average
Popularity
Top 10%

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

Olfaction plays an important role in human social communication, including multiple domains in which people often rely on their sense of smell in the social context. The importance of the sense of smell and its role can however vary inter-individually and culturally. Despite the growing body of literature on differences in olfactory performance or hedonic preferences across the globe, the aspects of a given culture as well as culturally universal individual differences affecting odor awareness in human social life remain unknown. Here, we conducted a large-scale analysis of data collected from 10 794 participants from 52 study sites from 44 countries all over the world. The aim of our research was to explore the potential individual and country-level correlates of odor awareness in the social context. The results show that the individual characteristics were more strongly related than country-level factors to self-reported odor awareness in different social contexts. A model including individual-level predictors (gender, age, material situation, education, and preferred social distance) provided a relatively good fit to the data, but adding country-level predictors (Human Development Index, population density, and average temperature) did not improve model parameters. Although there were some cross-cultural differences in social odor awareness, the main differentiating role was played by the individual differences. This suggests that people living in different cultures and different climate conditions may still share some similar patterns of odor awareness if they share other individual-level characteristics.

Description

Keywords

odor awareness, olfaction, smell, culture, Sex-Differences, Olfactory Function, Mate Selection, Air-Pollution, Identification, Smell, Mhc, Perception, Behavior, Humans, Male, [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio], Culture, 150, 501008 Group dynamics, BODY ODOR, 501021 Social psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, [SDV.IDA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineering, Faculdade de Artes e Humanidades, smell, SDG 13 - Climate Action, Social Norms, Aged, 80 and over, SMELL, HUMANS, [SDV.IDA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food engineering, MEXICO-CITY, Middle Aged, 001, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities, [SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio], Smell, SDG 13 – Maßnahmen zum Klimaschutz, 501021 Sozialpsychologie, Female, olfaction, Adult, SEX-DIFFERENCES, Adolescent, [SPI.GPROC] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process Engineering, odor awareness ; olfaction ; smell ; culture, BF, ., odor awareness;olfaction;smell;culture, odor awareness, Young Adult, 501008 Gruppendynamik, Humans, [SPI.GPROC]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process Engineering, OLFACTORY FUNCTION, Social Behavior, Aged, PERCEPTION, MATE SELECTION, IDENTIFICATION, SDG 11 – Nachhaltige Städte und Gemeinden, Odor awareness, AIR-POLLUTION, Models, Theoretical, Olfactory Perception, Olfaction, 300, culture, Odorants, Metacognition

Fields of Science

0302 clinical medicine, 03 medical and health sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
16

Source

Chemıcal Senses

Volume

43

Issue

7

Start Page

503

End Page

513
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Citations

CrossRef : 11

Scopus : 20

PubMed : 7

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 126

SCOPUS™ Citations

20

checked on Feb 14, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

18

checked on Feb 14, 2026

Page Views

3

checked on Feb 14, 2026

Downloads

3

checked on Feb 14, 2026

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4

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