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From sterile labs to rich VR: Immersive multisensory context critical for odors to induce motivated cleaning behavior

Authors :
de Groot, J.H.B.
Beetsma, D.J.V.
van Aerts, T.J.A.
le Berre, Elodie
Gallagher, David
Shaw, Emma
Aarts, H.
Smeets, M.A.M.
de Groot, J.H.B.
Beetsma, D.J.V.
van Aerts, T.J.A.
le Berre, Elodie
Gallagher, David
Shaw, Emma
Aarts, H.
Smeets, M.A.M.
Source :
Behavior Research Methods vol.52 (2020) p.1657–1670 [ISSN 1554-351X]
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Extending traditional research methods for studying the effects of odor on behavior, this study applied virtual reality (VR) to create a real-world, immersive context that was compared with a traditional sterile, non-immersive lab setting. Using precise odor administration with olfactometry, participants were exposed to three odors (cleaning-related pleasant smell, cleaning-unrelated pleasant smell: vanillin, and odorless air). Our aim was to tease apart whether participants’ motivation to clean was driven by cleaning associations and/or odor pleasantness, and how context would accentuate these effects. The results indeed showed that, in VR only, the cleaning-related smell elicited faster and more energetic cleaning behavior on a custom-designed cleaning task, and faster and more voluminous olfactory sampling compared with controls (vanillin, air). These effects were not driven by odor valence, given the general absence of significant differences between the pleasant control odor vanillin and odorless air. In sum, combining rigorous experimental control with high ecological validity, this research shows the context dependency of (congruent) odors affecting motivated behavior in an immersive context only

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Behavior Research Methods vol.52 (2020) p.1657–1670 [ISSN 1554-351X]
Notes :
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-019-01341-y, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1453247736
Document Type :
Electronic Resource