23 results on '"Bensafi, Moustafa"'
Search Results
2. Peripheral Nervous System Responses to Food Stimuli: Analysis Using Data Science Approaches
- Author
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Moranges, Maelle, Plantevit, Marc, Bensafi, Moustafa, Sant'Ana, Anderson S., Series Editor, and Bensafi, Moustafa, editor
- Published
- 2023
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3. Olfactory perceptual fingerprints of people with olfactory dysfunction and healthy controls.
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Drnovsek, Eva, Haehner, Antje, Bensafi, Moustafa, and Hummel, Thomas
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OLFACTORY perception ,SUPERVISED learning ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,SMELL disorders ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,ODORS - Abstract
Objective(s): An olfactory perceptual fingerprint (OPF) defines one's olfactory perception using perceptual descriptor ratings (such as odor pleasantness, intensity) for a set of odors. OPFs have been shown to distinguish patients with COVID‐related olfactory dysfunction (OD) and healthy controls with 86% accuracy. However, all participants rated the same odorants. With the aim to evaluate whether the OPFs are indeed odorant independent, previously published dataset by Lötsch et al. was reanalyzed. Furthermore, this independent dataset was used to check whether the OPFs separate patients with OD due to various causes from controls. Methods: The study included 104 controls and 42 patients, who were randomized into four odor sets with 10 odorants each. Odorants were presented using a computer‐controlled olfactometer and evaluated on scales from 1 (not at all) to 5 (very) using perceptual descriptors pleasant, intensive, familiar, edible, irritating, cold/warm, and painful. Results: Permutational multivariate analysis of variance showed that the odor set did not have a significant effect on the OPFs, confirming that the OPFs are indeed odorant independent. On the other hand, both diagnosis and age affected the OPFs (p <.001) and explained around 11% and 5% of the variance of the OPFs, respectively. Furthermore, a supervised machine learning method, random forest classifier, showed that OPF can distinguish patients and controls with 80% accuracy. Conclusion: OPFs are odorant independent. Patients perceived odors as less familiar, less intense, and less edible than controls. Other perceptual descriptors were much less important for the separation of patients and controls. Level of evidence: 3 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Data-science based analysis of perceptual spaces of odors in olfactory loss.
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Lötsch, Jörn, Ultsch, Alfred, Hähner, Antje, Willgeroth, Vivien, Bensafi, Moustafa, Zaliani, Andrea, and Hummel, Thomas
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ODORS ,OLFACTORY perception ,PRINCIPAL components analysis ,QUALITY of life ,SMELL ,DIAGNOSIS ,PEOPLE with disabilities - Abstract
Diminished sense of smell impairs the quality of life but olfactorily disabled people are hardly considered in measures of disability inclusion. We aimed to stratify perceptual characteristics and odors according to the extent to which they are perceived differently with reduced sense of smell, as a possible basis for creating olfactory experiences that are enjoyed in a similar way by subjects with normal or impaired olfactory function. In 146 subjects with normal or reduced olfactory function, perceptual characteristics (edibility, intensity, irritation, temperature, familiarity, hedonics, painfulness) were tested for four sets of 10 different odors each. Data were analyzed with (i) a projection based on principal component analysis and (ii) the training of a machine-learning algorithm in a 1000-fold cross-validated setting to distinguish between olfactory diagnosis based on odor property ratings. Both analytical approaches identified perceived intensity and familiarity with the odor as discriminating characteristics between olfactory diagnoses, while evoked pain sensation and perceived temperature were not discriminating, followed by edibility. Two disjoint sets of odors were identified, i.e., d = 4 "discriminating odors" with respect to olfactory diagnosis, including cis-3-hexenol, methyl salicylate, 1-butanol and cineole, and d = 7 "non-discriminating odors", including benzyl acetate, heptanal, 4-ethyl-octanoic acid, methional, isobutyric acid, 4-decanolide and p-cresol. Different weightings of the perceptual properties of odors with normal or reduced sense of smell indicate possibilities to create sensory experiences such as food, meals or scents that by emphasizing trigeminal perceptions can be enjoyed by both normosmic and hyposmic individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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5. Smells Influence Perceived Pleasantness but Not Memorization of a Visual Virtual Environment.
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Sabiniewicz, Agnieszka, Schaefer, Elena, Cagdas, Guducu, Manesse, Cedric, Bensafi, Moustafa, Krasteva, Nadejda, Nelles, Gabriele, and Hummel, Thomas
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MEMORIZATION ,VIRTUAL reality ,SMELL ,ODORS ,VISUAL perception - Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate whether the perception of still scenes in a virtual environment in congruent versus incongruent condition can be influenced by odors. Ninety healthy participants were divided into three groups, including two experimental virtual reality (VR) environments: a rose garden, an orange basket, and a control condition. In each VR condition, participants were exposed to a rose odor, an orange odor, or no odor, resulting in congruent, incongruent, and control conditions. Participants were asked to describe (a) the content of the VR scene and rate its overall pleasantness and (b) the smell and to rate its intensity and pleasantness. For each condition, participants were tested twice. During the second test, participants provided ratings and descriptions of the content of the VR scenes without being exposed to odors or VR environments. Virtual scenarios tended to be remembered as more pleasant when presented with congruent odors. Furthermore, participants used more descriptors in congruent scenarios than in incongruent scenarios. Eventually, rose odor appeared to be remembered as more pleasant when presented within congruent scenarios. These findings show that olfactory stimuli in congruent versus incongruent conditions can possibly modulate the perception of the pleasantness of visual scenes but not the memorization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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6. Interdisciplinary challenges for elucidating human olfactory attractiveness.
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Ferdenzi, Camille, Ortegón, Stéphane Richard, Delplanque, Sylvain, Baldovini, Nicolas, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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BEHAVIORAL sciences ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SMELL ,ODORS ,SOCIAL interaction ,CHEMICAL species ,HUMAN reproduction - Abstract
Many species use chemicals to communicate. In humans, there is increasing evidence that chemicals conveyed by the body are extremely important in interpersonal relationships. However, many aspects of chemical communication remain to be explored to fully understand this function in humans. The aim of this article is to identify relevant challenges in this field, with a focus on human attractiveness in the context of reproduction, and to put forward roadmaps for future studies that will hopefully extend to a wider range of social interactions. The first challenge consists in not being limited to body (mal)odours from the axilla. Preliminary data on how the odour of the face and head is perceived are presented. Second, there is a crucial need to increase our knowledge of the chemical bases of human chemical communication. Third, cross-cultural approaches must not be overlooked, because they have a major input in understanding the universal and culture-specific aspects of chemical communication. Fourth, the influence of specific cultural practices such as contraceptive and fragrance use is likely to be prominent and, therefore, needs to be well described. The fifth and last challenge for research projects in this field is the integration of different disciplines such as behavioural sciences, social sciences, neurosciences and microbiology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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7. Effects of familiarization on odor hedonic responses and food choices in children with autism spectrum disorders.
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Luisier, Anne-Claude, Petitpierre, Genevieve, Clerc Bérod, Annick, Garcia-Burgos, David, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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AUTISM ,DIET ,EMOTIONS ,FACIAL expression ,FOOD ,FOOD preferences ,ODORS ,OLFACTORY nerve ,SMELL ,VERBAL behavior ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This study assessed whether olfactory familiarization can render food odors more pleasant, and consequently food more attractive, to children with autism spectrum disorder. Participants were first presented with a series of food odors (session 1). Then, they were familiarized on four occasions (time window: 5 weeks) with one of the two most neutral odors (the other neutral odor was used as control) (session 2). In session 3, participants smelled the entire series of odors again. Both verbal and facial responses were compared from session 1 to session 3. After session 3, the children were presented with two identical foods (one containing the familiarized odor and one the control odor) and were asked to choose between these foods. Results revealed (1) a specific increase in positive emotions for the familiarized odor and (2) that 68% of the children chose the food associated with the "familiarized odor" (children who chose the "familiarized odor" food exhibited significantly more sensory particularities). These findings suggest that it is possible to modulate olfactory emotions and expand the dietary repertoire of children with autism spectrum disorder. Application of this paradigm may enable innovative prospects for food education in autism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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8. Chemical features mining provides new descriptive structure-odor relationships.
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Licon, Carmen C., Bosc, Guillaume, Sabri, Mohammed, Mantel, Marylou, Fournel, Arnaud, Bushdid, Caroline, Golebiowski, Jerome, Robardet, Celine, Plantevit, Marc, Kaytoue, Mehdi, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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ODORS ,COLOR vision ,PREDICTION models ,BIOLOGY ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
An important goal in researching the biology of olfaction is to link the perception of smells to the chemistry of odorants. In other words, why do some odorants smell like fruits and others like flowers? While the so-called stimulus-percept issue was resolved in the field of color vision some time ago, the relationship between the chemistry and psycho-biology of odors remains unclear up to the present day. Although a series of investigations have demonstrated that this relationship exists, the descriptive and explicative aspects of the proposed models that are currently in use require greater sophistication. One reason for this is that the algorithms of current models do not consistently consider the possibility that multiple chemical rules can describe a single quality despite the fact that this is the case in reality, whereby two very different molecules can evoke a similar odor. Moreover, the available datasets are often large and heterogeneous, thus rendering the generation of multiple rules without any use of a computational approach overly complex. We considered these two issues in the present paper. First, we built a new database containing 1689 odorants characterized by physicochemical properties and olfactory qualities. Second, we developed a computational method based on a subgroup discovery algorithm that discriminated perceptual qualities of smells on the basis of physicochemical properties. Third, we ran a series of experiments on 74 distinct olfactory qualities and showed that the generation and validation of rules linking chemistry to odor perception was possible. Taken together, our findings provide significant new insights into the relationship between stimulus and percept in olfaction. In addition, by automatically extracting new knowledge linking chemistry of odorants and psychology of smells, our results provide a new computational framework of analysis enabling scientists in the field to test original hypotheses using descriptive or predictive modeling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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9. Altered Affective Evaluations of Smells in Alzheimer's Disease.
- Author
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Joussain, Pauline, Bessy, Marion, Fournel, Arnaud, Ferdenzia, Camille, Rouby, Catherine, Delphin-Combe, Floriane, Krolak-Salmon, Pierre, Bensafi, Moustafa, and Ferdenzi, Camille
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SMELL disorders ,ALZHEIMER'S patients ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,OLFACTORY perception ,PLEASANTNESS & unpleasantness (Psychology) ,DIAGNOSIS ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,ANALYSIS of variance ,EMOTIONS ,ODORS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,SMELL ,CASE-control method ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Studies of olfaction in Alzheimer's disease (AD) mainly focused on deficits in odor detection and identification, with very few investigations of olfactory emotional changes and their consequences for hedonics.Objective: The aim of the present study was to characterize affective evaluations of odors in AD patients.Methods: To this end, 20 AD patients and 20 matched controls were tested. Participants were screened for odor detection and identification ability and then asked to rate the intensity, pleasantness, and edibility of 20 odorants.Results: Results showed that, overall, AD patients had lower detection ability and perceived all odors as weaker than controls. As expected, they had lower identification ability on both cued and non-cued tasks. In addition, when smelling pleasant odors, patients had significantly lower hedonic ratings than controls (p < 0.02), whereas no group difference was found for neutral or unpleasant odors (p > 0.05 in both cases). Moreover, an analysis combining both intensity and pleasantness ratings showed that whereas intensity increased as a function of pleasantness and unpleasantness in controls, this quadratic relationship was not observed in AD patients.Conclusions: The study suggests that the simplest categorization criteria of odors (intensity and hedonic valence) are impaired in AD patients (especially for pleasant odors). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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10. Odor Perception in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and its Relationship to Food Neophobia.
- Author
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Luisier, Anne-Claude, Petitpierre, Genevieve, Ferdenzi, Camille, Bérod, Annick Clerc, Giboreau, Agnes, Rouby, Catherine, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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AUTISTIC children ,AUTISM spectrum disorders ,PERCEPTION in children ,ODORS ,NEOPHOBIA ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Atypical sensory functioning in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) has been well documented in the last decade for the visual, tactile and auditory systems, but olfaction in ASD is still understudied. The aim of the present study was to examine whether children with ASD and neuro-typically (NT) developed children differed in odor perception, at the cognitive (familiarity and identification ability), sensorimotor (olfactory exploration) and affective levels (hedonic evaluation). Because an important function of the sense of smell is its involvement in eating, from food selection to appreciation and recognition, a potential link between odor perception and food neophobia was also investigated. To these ends, 10 children between 6 and 13 years old diagnosed with ASD and 10 NT control children were tested. To compare performance, 16 stimuli were used and food neophobia was assessed by the parents on a short food neophobia scale. Results revealed that (i) significant hedonic discrimination between attractive and aversive odors was observed in NT (p = 0.005; d = 2.378) and ASD children (p = 0.042; d = 0.941), and (ii) hedonic discrimination level was negatively correlated with food neophobia scores in ASD (p = 0.007) but not NT children. In conclusion, this study offers new insights into odor perception in ASD children, highlighting a relationship between odor hedonic reactivity and eating behavior. This opens up new perspectives on both (i) the role of olfaction in the construction of eating behavior in ASD children, and (ii) the measurement and meaning of food neophobia in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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11. Viewing Olfactory Affective Responses Through the Sniff Prism: Effect of Perceptual Dimensions and Age on Olfactomotor Responses to Odors.
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Ferdenzi, Camille, Fournel, Arnaud, Thévenet, Marc, Coppin, Géraldine, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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OLFACTORY perception ,ODORS ,STIMULUS & response (Psychology) ,BRAIN function localization ,EXPERIMENTAL psychology - Abstract
Sniffing, which is the active sampling of olfactory information through the nasal cavity, is part of the olfactory percept. It is influenced by stimulus properties, affects how an odor is perceived, and is sufficient (without an odor being present) to activate the olfactory cortex. However, many aspects of the affective correlates of sniffing behavior remain unclear, in particular the modulation of volume and duration as a function of odor hedonics. The present study used a wide range of odorants with contrasted hedonic valence to test: (1) which psychophysical function best describes the relationship between sniffing characteristics and odor hedonics (e.g., linear, or polynomial); (2) whether sniffing characteristics are sensitive to more subtle variations in pleasantness than simple pleasant-unpleasant contrast; (3) how sensitive sniffing is to other perceptual dimensions of odors such as odor familiarity or edibility; and (4) whether the sniffing/hedonic valence relationship is valid in other populations than young adults, such as the elderly. Four experiments were conducted, using 16-48 odorants each, and recruiting a total of 102 participants, including a group of elderly people. Results of the four experiments were very consistent in showing that sniffing was sensitive to subtle variations in unpleasantness but not to subtle variations in pleasantness, and that, the more unpleasant the odor, the more limited the spontaneous sampling of olfactory information through the nasal cavity (smaller volume, shorter duration). This also applied, although to a lesser extent, to elderly participants. Relationships between sniffing and other perceptual dimensions (familiarity, edibility) were less clear. It was concluded that sniffing behavior might be involved in adaptive responses protecting the subject from possibly harmful substances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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12. Effect of Aging on Hedonic Appreciation of Pleasant and Unpleasant Odors.
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Joussain, Pauline, Thevenet, Marc, Rouby, Catherine, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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AGING ,ODORS ,PSYCHOPHYSICS ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,SYNCHRONIZATION ,SENSORY perception ,SENSES ,NEUROSCIENCES - Abstract
Does hedonic appreciation evolve differently for pleasant odors and unpleasant odors during normal aging? To answer this question we combined psychophysics and electro-encephalographic recordings in young and old adults. A first study showed that pleasant odorants (but not unpleasant ones) were rated as less pleasant by old adults. A second study validated this decrease in hedonic appreciation for agreeable odors and further showed that smelling these odorants decreased beta event-related synchronization in aged participants. In conclusion, the study offers new insights into the evolution of odor hedonic perception during normal aging, highlighting for the first time a change in processing pleasant odors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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13. The Role of the Piriform Cortex in Human Olfactory Perception: Insights from Functional Neuroimaging Studies.
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Bensafi, Moustafa
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CEREBRAL cortex , *OLFACTORY nerve , *ODORS , *COGNITION research , *BRAIN imaging - Abstract
Functional neuroimaging studies of the olfactory system during the last two decades have studied the role of the piriform cortex (PC) in human olfaction. Whereas some reported absence of PC activation, most suggested that the PC is more than a relay and plays an active role from sensory to more cognitive aspects of human olfactory perception. The aim of the present review is to clarify our current understanding of the role of the PC in human odor perception, by underscoring the sensory and cognitive factors which are important in piriform activity modulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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14. Global Features of Neural Activity in the Olfactory System Forma Parallel Code That Predicts Olfactory Behavior and Perception.
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Haddad, Rafi, Weiss, Tali, Khan, Rehan, Nadler, Boaz, Mandairon, Nathalie, Bensafi, Moustafa, Schneidman, Elad, and Sobel, Noam
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OLFACTORY nerve ,ODORS ,NEURAL transmission ,NEURAL circuitry ,SMELL - Abstract
Odor identity is coded in spatiotemporal patterns of neural activity in the olfactory bulb. Here we asked whether meaningful olfactory information could also be read from the global olfactory neural population response. We applied standard statistical methods of dimensionality-reduction to neural activity from 12 previously published studies using seven different species. Four studies reported olfactory receptor activity, seven reported glomerulus activity, and one reported the activity of projection-neurons. We found two linear axes of neural population activity that accounted for more than half of the variance in neural response across species. The first axis was correlated with the total sum of odor-induced neural activity, and reflected the behavior of approach or withdrawal in animals, and odorant pleasantness in humans. The second and orthogonal axis reflected odorant toxicity across species. We conclude that in parallel with spatiotemporal pattern coding, the olfactory system can use simple global computations to read vital olfactory information from the neural population response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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15. Perceptual and Sensorimotor Differences between “Good” and “Poor” Olfactory Mental Imagers.
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Rouby, Catherine, Bourgeat, Fanny, Rinck, Fanny, Poncelet, Johan, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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ODORS ,SMELL ,SENSES ,SENSORY stimulation ,OLFACTORY receptors - Abstract
Like odor perception, odor imagery is characterized by wide variability between individuals. The present two-part study sought to assess whether this inter-individual variability is underlain by behavioral differences in actual odor perception. In study 1, subjects judged the intensity, pleasantness, familiarity and edibility of 3 odorants. Participants were split into two olfactory imagery groups (“good” versus “poor” olfactory imagers) according to their scores on an imagery questionnaire. Results showed that good olfactory imagers judged all odors as more familiar and more edible than did poor olfactory imagers. Study 2 sought to determine whether these effects derived from a particular strategy of reenacting olfactomotor responses to smells on the part of good olfactory imagers, by recording their sniffs during odor perception. Results revealed that good olfactory imagers sniffed all odors longer and, again, judged these same odors as more edible and familiar. This supports the hypothesis of more complete odor processing and better access to odor semantics in good olfactory imagers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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16. Humans and Mice Express Similar Olfactory Preferences.
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Mandairon, Nathalie, Poncelet, Johan, Bensafi, Moustafa, and Didier, Anne
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OLFACTORY nerve ,OLFACTORY receptors ,LABORATORY mice ,ODORS ,SOCIAL interaction ,INGESTION ,SMELL ,EXPERIENCE ,LEARNING ,MOLECULES ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In humans, the pleasantness of odors is a major contributor to social relationships and food intake. Smells evoke attraction and repulsion responses, reflecting the hedonic value of the odorant. While olfactory preferences are known to be strongly modulated by experience and learning, it has been recently suggested that, in humans, the pleasantness of odors may be partly explained by the physicochemical properties of the odorant molecules themselves. If odor hedonic value is indeed predetermined by odorant structure, then it could be hypothesized that other species will show similar odor preferences to humans. Combining behavioral and psychophysical approaches, we here show that odorants rated as pleasant by humans were also those which, behaviorally, mice investigated longer and human subjects sniffed longer, thereby revealing for the first time a component of olfactory hedonic perception conserved across species. Consistent with this, we further show that odor pleasantness rating in humans and investigation time in mice were both correlated with the physicochemical properties of the molecules, suggesting that olfactory preferences are indeed partly engraved in the physicochemical structure of the odorant. That odor preferences are shared between mammal species and are guided by physicochemical features of odorant stimuli strengthens the view that odor preference is partially predetermined. These findings open up new perspectives for the study of the neural mechanisms of hedonic perception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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17. Involvement of right piriform cortex in olfactory familiarity judgments
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Plailly, Jane, Bensafi, Moustafa, Pachot-Clouard, Mathilde, Delon-Martin, Chantal, Kareken, David A., Rouby, Catherine, Segebarth, Christoph, and Royet, Jean-P.
- Subjects
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ODORS , *NEURAL circuitry , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *NERVOUS system - Abstract
Abstract: Previous studies have shown activation of right orbitofrontal cortex during judgments of odor familiarity. In the present study, we sought to extend our knowledge about the neural circuits involved in such a task by exploring the involvement of the right prefrontal areas and limbic/primary olfactory structures. Fourteen right-handed male subjects were tested using fMRI with a single functional run of two olfactory conditions (odor detection and familiarity judgments). Each condition included three epochs. During the familiarity condition, subjects rated whether odors were familiar or unfamiliar. During the detection condition, participants decided if odors were present. When contrasting the familiarity with the detection conditions, activated areas were found mainly in the right piriform cortex (PC) and hippocampus, the left inferior frontal gyrus and amygdala, and bilaterally in the mid-fusiform gyrus. Further analyses demonstrated that the right PC was more strongly activated than the left PC. This result supports the notion that the right PC is preferentially involved in judgments of odor familiarity. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
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18. Perceptual, affective, and cognitive judgments of odors: Pleasantness and handedness effects
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Bensafi, Moustafa, Rouby, Catherine, Farget, Vincent, Bertrand, Bernard, Vigouroux, Michel, Holley, André, and Holley, André
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ODORS , *HANDEDNESS - Abstract
The present study sought to examine the differential processing of pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant odors. The effects of the nostril stimulated (left or right) and the type of judgment (perceptual, affective, or cognitive) performed on the olfactory stimuli were also studied. To this end, 64 subjects were asked to smell pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant odors under four conditions (detection, intensity, pleasantness, and familiarity tasks). The participants were to perform these tasks as quickly as possible, while response times were recorded. The results showed that (i) unpleasant odors were assessed more rapidly than neutral or pleasant odors, and that this was specifically true (ii) during right nostril stimulation, and (iii) during pleasantness assessment, suggesting possible differential cerebral hemisphere involvement, with a right-side advantage for processing of unpleasant affect in olfaction. A handedness effect on familiarity judgment is also discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
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19. Past, Present, and Future of Human Chemical Communication Research.
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Loos, Helene M., Schaal, Benoist, Pause, Bettina M., Smeets, Monique A. M., Ferdenzi, Camille, Roberts, S. Craig, de Groot, Jasper, Lübke, Katrin T., Croy, Ilona, Freiherr, Jessica, Bensafi, Moustafa, Hummel, Thomas, and Havlíček, Jan
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ODORS , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL biology , *NEURAL pathways , *BIOCHEMISTRY , *CELLULAR signal transduction , *BEHAVIORAL sciences , *SMELL , *MEDICAL research , *SOCIAL skills , *MOLECULAR biology , *INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
Although chemical signaling is an essential mode of communication in most vertebrates, it has long been viewed as having negligible effects in humans. However, a growing body of evidence shows that the sense of smell affects human behavior in social contexts ranging from affiliation and parenting to disease avoidance and social threat. This article aims to (a) introduce research on human chemical communication in the historical context of the behavioral sciences; (b) provide a balanced overview of recent advances that describe individual differences in the emission of semiochemicals and the neural mechanisms underpinning their perception, that together demonstrate communicative function; and (c) propose directions for future research toward unraveling the molecular principles involved and understanding the variability in the generation, transmission, and reception of chemical signals in increasingly ecologically valid conditions. Achieving these goals will enable us to address some important societal challenges but are within reach only with the aid of genuinely interdisciplinary approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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20. Is there a shift in odour pleasantness with age?
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JOUSSAIN, Pauline, PONCELET, Johan, BENSAFI, Moustafa, and ROUBY, Catherine
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SMELL ,ODORS ,AGING ,HEDONISTIC consumption ,OLDER people's attitudes - Abstract
Is there a shift in odour pleasantness with age and if yes what could explain it? In this study we set out to examine this question using 2 experiments. Experiment 1 compared 50 young adults (age: 18-40) to 89 old adults (age: 60-76). Participants were asked to rate pleasantness and intensity of 20 odorants. Results revealed that the two groups did not differ in their overall pleasantness and intensity ratings (p>0.05 in both cases). In Experiment 2 we hypothesized that an additional factor such as edibility of the odorant source may influence odour pleasantness during aging. Thirty young adults (age: 18-40) were compared to 30 old adults (age: 60-75). Participants were asked to give their hedonic ratings to the same 20 odorants and to estimate odour intensity, familiarity, and edibility, as well as to give a brief verbal description about the odour. Odour threshold and identification scores were also assessed. Results revealed that the correlation between pleasantness and edibility ratings was overall significantly greater in young adults vs. old adults (p<0.02). Moreover, whereas odour pleasantness and edibility correlated significantly in 27 out of 30 young subjects, the same correlation was significant in only 19 out of 30 old subjects. A comparison within the group of old adults revealed that those with a non-significant pleasantness/edibility correlation also scored lower in odour identification (p<0.0007) and used less descriptions referring to food (p<0.05). The two groups did not differ in odour threshold (p>0.05). Taken together, these results suggest that in some older people, odour hedonic perception may be disconnected from knowledge about the food significance of the stimulus. This link between edibility, olfactory pleasure and identification may be thus crucial in food perception during aging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
21. Relationship Between Psychophysiological Responses to Aversive Odors and Nutritional Status During Normal Aging.
- Author
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Joussain, Pauline, Ferdenzi, Camille, Djordjevic, Jelena, and Bensafi, Moustafa
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PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *ODORS , *NUTRITIONAL status , *AGING , *SMELL , *PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Psychophysiological responses to disgusting and pleasant smells are one of the most important aspects of olfaction. These emotional signals can constitute an alert against toxic substances, and they may play a major role in food selection and nutritional intake. The aim of this study was to test this hypothesis by examining whether individual physiological responses to odors could predict the subject's nutritional status. Because aging is associated with changes in emotional response to smells, we also examined how aging affects the relationship between olfaction and nutrition. Twenty young and 20 old participants perceived a series of odorants while their psychophysiological responses were simultaneously measured, and completed the Mini-Nutritional Assessment (MNA) questionnaire. Regression between individual correlation coefficients (r-values between odor perceptual ratings and physiological parameters) and individual MNA scores revealed that appropriateness of the physiological responses to aversive odors predicted nutritional status (R2 = 0.22, P < 0.007): participants with higher electromyogram corrugator activity in response to aversive smells had better nutritional status. Furthermore, this relationship was significant in old (R2 = 0.45, P < 0.005) but not young participants (R2 = 0.04, P > 0.44). Taken together, preserved functioning of somatic markers in response to odors during normal aging is associated with better nutritional status, and may facilitate healthier food selection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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22. Individual Differences in Verbal and Non-Verbal Affective Responses to Smells: Influence of Odor Label Across Cultures.
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Ferdenzi, Camille, Joussain, Pauline, Digard, Bérengère, Luneau, Lucie, Djordjevic, Jelena, and Bensafi, Moustafa
- Subjects
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OLFACTORY perception , *ODORS , *SEMANTICS -- Psychological aspects , *CULTURE -- Psychological aspects , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Olfactory perception is highly variable from one person to another, as a function of individual and contextual factors. Here, we investigated the influence of 2 important factors of variation: culture and semantic information. More specifically, we tested whether cultural-specific knowledge and presence versus absence of odor names modulate odor perception, by measuring these effects in 2 populations differing in cultural background but not in language. Participants from France and Quebec, Canada, smelled 4 culture-specific and 2 non-specific odorants in 2 conditions: first without label, then with label. Their ratings of pleasantness, familiarity, edibility, and intensity were collected as well as their psychophysiological and olfactomotor responses. The results revealed significant effects of culture and semantic information, both at the verbal and non-verbal level. They also provided evidence that availability of semantic information reduced cultural differences. Semantic information had a unifying action on olfactory perception that overrode the influence of cultural background. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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23. The effect of early experience on odor perception in humans: Psychological and physiological correlates
- Author
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Poncelet, Johan, Rinck, Fanny, Bourgeat, Fanny, Schaal, Benoist, Rouby, Catherine, Bensafi, Moustafa, and Hummel, Thomas
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ODORS , *SENSORY perception , *NEUROPLASTICITY , *CROSS-cultural studies , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *PSYCHOPHYSICS , *SMELL , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: The olfactory function in humans is characterized by wide variability between individuals. One of the prominent factors that contribute to this plasticity is early exposure. The present study examined how brain activity is modulated by such olfactory experience. To this end, two groups of people living in France but originating from different cultures (“European-French” (EF, 18 subjects) vs. “Algerian-French” (AF, 19 subjects)) were tested, and their perceptual and physiological responses to the smells of mint (presumed to be experienced earlier in life by “Algerian-French” subjects) and of rose (control odorant) were compared. Neurophysiological responses were obtained in the form of chemosensory event-related potentials (CSERP). The results confirmed that the AF group was exposed to Mint tea earlier than the EF group. On the perceptual level, when asked to associate the smell of mint with objects or events retrieved from memory, the discourse of AF subjects included more “experience-oriented” associations than that of EF subjects. This was associated with longer P2 latency in CSERPs in response to the smell of mint in the AF group. These findings highlight the plasticity of behavioral and neural olfactory processes as a result of differential lifetime exposure. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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