Abstract

How do valenced odors affect the perception and evaluation of facial expressions? We reviewed 25 studies published from 1989 to 2020 on cross-modal behavioral effects of odors on the perception of faces. The results indicate that odors may influence facial evaluations and classifications in several ways. Faces are rated as more arousing during simultaneous odor exposure, and the rated valence of faces is affected in the direction of the odor valence. For facial classification tasks, in general, valenced odors, whether pleasant or unpleasant, decrease facial emotion classification speed. The evidence for valence congruency effects was inconsistent. Some studies found that exposure to a valenced odor facilitates the processing of a similarly valenced facial expression. The results for facial evaluation were mirrored in classical conditioning studies, as faces conditioned with valenced odors were rated in the direction of the odor valence. However, the evidence of odor effects was inconsistent when the task was to classify faces. Furthermore, using a z-curve analysis, we found clear evidence for publication bias. Our recommendations for future research include greater consideration of individual differences in sensation and cognition, individual differences (e.g., differences in odor sensitivity related to age, gender, or culture), establishing standardized experimental assessments and stimuli, larger study samples, and embracing open research practices.

Highlights

  • Inferring other peoples’ emotional states from their facial expressions is an essential social ability

  • Classical conditioning studies where neutral faces were associated with valenced odors; these studies used both emotion classification tasks and facial evaluations as outcome measures

  • Common facial expressions used in the reviewed studies were happy, neutral, disgusted, fearful/anxious, and angry expressions

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Summary

Introduction

Inferring other peoples’ emotional states from their facial expressions is an essential social ability. Facial perception has been studied in isolation; social cues are often ambiguous and rely heavily on contextual information for correct interpretation (Aviezer et al, 2017). How we interpret facial expressions may vary by previous experiences, cultural background, and context (Barrett et al, 2019). In line with this reasoning, several recent reviews have considered the effects of auditory context (Gerdes et al, 2014), visual cue context, background scene, body posture, situation, culture, and individual differences (Aviezer et al, 2017; Wieser & Brosch, 2012). This research review aims to integrate the emerging insights from how odors are perceptually integrated with emotionally expressive face stimuli

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