2012
DOI: 10.1177/0956797612445317
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Chemosignals Communicate Human Emotions

Abstract: Can humans communicate emotional states via chemical signals? In the experiment reported here, we addressed this question by examining the function of chemosignals in a framework furnished by embodied social communication theory. Following this theory, we hypothesized that the processes a sender experiences during distinctive emotional states are transmitted to receivers by means of the chemicals that the sender produces, thus establishing a multilevel correspondence between sender and receiver. In a double-bl… Show more

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Cited by 178 publications
(236 citation statements)
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“…In addition, odor cues are often difficult to assess consciously (14)(15)(16). With this background, we would expect visual and olfactory cues of LPS-induced sickness…”
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confidence: 99%
“…In addition, odor cues are often difficult to assess consciously (14)(15)(16). With this background, we would expect visual and olfactory cues of LPS-induced sickness…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Odors may communicate emotional information such as disgust and fear (de Groot, Smeets, Kaldewaij, Duijndam, & Semin, 2012), and perception of body odors may guide social preferences (Li, Moallem, Paller, & Gottfried, 2007). Odors are particularly potent in evoking disgust, and disgust is the primary emotional response to unpleasant odors (Alaoui-Ismaïli, Robin, Rada, Dittmar, & Vernet-Maury, 1997;AlaouiIsmaïli, Vernet-Maury, Dittmar, Delhomme, & Chanel, 1997).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Examining whether individuals with a higher sensitivity to sociochemosensory stimuli score higher on measures of socially relevant personality traits is an interesting direction for future research. It is also worth considering whether some personality traits moderate the effect of exposure to emotional information contained in body odor on the recipient's affective state and behavior (de Groot et al 2012). Such emotional contagion may be stronger for individuals characterized by a higher level of socially relevant personality traits (like agreeableness or communion) than for those less aware of others' feelings and needs.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Directionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sociochemosensory cues also contain information about donors' current emotional states (de Groot et al 2012). The emotional valence of such stimuli was reported to affect the recipient's own emotional state.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%