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Odour-based context reinstatement effects with indirect measures of memory: the curious case of rosemary

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Odour-based context reinstatement effects with indirect measures of memory: the curious case of rosemary. / Ball, Linden J.; Shoker, Jaswinder; Miles, Jeremy N. V.
In: British Journal of Psychology, Vol. 101, No. 4, 11.2010, p. 655-678.

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Ball LJ, Shoker J, Miles JNV. Odour-based context reinstatement effects with indirect measures of memory: the curious case of rosemary. British Journal of Psychology. 2010 Nov;101(4):655-678. doi: 10.1348/000712609X479663

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Ball, Linden J. ; Shoker, Jaswinder ; Miles, Jeremy N. V. / Odour-based context reinstatement effects with indirect measures of memory : the curious case of rosemary. In: British Journal of Psychology. 2010 ; Vol. 101, No. 4. pp. 655-678.

Bibtex

@article{95f09c3a162d43ea99c2477c3c63d5b9,
title = "Odour-based context reinstatement effects with indirect measures of memory: the curious case of rosemary",
abstract = "Previous studies examining environmental context-dependent memory (ECDM) effects using indirect measures of memory have produced inconsistent findings. We report three experiments that examined ECDM in an indirect memory paradigm (word-fragment completion) using ambient odours as environmental contexts. Expt 1 manipulated the odour present at learning and testing (rosemary or lemon) to produce reinstated-context or switched-context conditions. Reinstating rosemary led to a striking ECDM effect, indicating that indirect memory testing can be sensitive to ECDM manipulations. Odour ratings also indicated that rosemary induced a more unpleasant mood in participants than lemon. Expt 2 assessed the influence on indirect retrieval of odour-based mood induction as well as odour distinctiveness, and indicated that rosemary's capacity to promote ECDM effects appears to arise from an additive combination of its unpleasantness-inducing properties and its distinctiveness. Expt 3 partially supported these proposals. Overall, our findings indicate that some odours are capable of producing ECDM effects using indirect testing procedures. Moreover, it appears that it is the inherent proprieties of odours on dimensions such as unpleasantness and distinctiveness that mediate the emergence of ECDM effects, thereby explaining the particular potency of rosemary's mnemonic influence when it is reinstated.",
keywords = "MOOD-DEPENDENT MEMORY, IMPLICIT MEMORY, ENVIRONMENTAL CONTEXT, VISUAL DISTINCTIVENESS, RETENTION, RECALL, MUSIC, ASSOCIATIONS, INFORMATION, FAMILIARITY",
author = "Ball, {Linden J.} and Jaswinder Shoker and Miles, {Jeremy N. V.}",
year = "2010",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1348/000712609X479663",
language = "English",
volume = "101",
pages = "655--678",
journal = "British Journal of Psychology",
issn = "0007-1269",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Odour-based context reinstatement effects with indirect measures of memory

T2 - the curious case of rosemary

AU - Ball, Linden J.

AU - Shoker, Jaswinder

AU - Miles, Jeremy N. V.

PY - 2010/11

Y1 - 2010/11

N2 - Previous studies examining environmental context-dependent memory (ECDM) effects using indirect measures of memory have produced inconsistent findings. We report three experiments that examined ECDM in an indirect memory paradigm (word-fragment completion) using ambient odours as environmental contexts. Expt 1 manipulated the odour present at learning and testing (rosemary or lemon) to produce reinstated-context or switched-context conditions. Reinstating rosemary led to a striking ECDM effect, indicating that indirect memory testing can be sensitive to ECDM manipulations. Odour ratings also indicated that rosemary induced a more unpleasant mood in participants than lemon. Expt 2 assessed the influence on indirect retrieval of odour-based mood induction as well as odour distinctiveness, and indicated that rosemary's capacity to promote ECDM effects appears to arise from an additive combination of its unpleasantness-inducing properties and its distinctiveness. Expt 3 partially supported these proposals. Overall, our findings indicate that some odours are capable of producing ECDM effects using indirect testing procedures. Moreover, it appears that it is the inherent proprieties of odours on dimensions such as unpleasantness and distinctiveness that mediate the emergence of ECDM effects, thereby explaining the particular potency of rosemary's mnemonic influence when it is reinstated.

AB - Previous studies examining environmental context-dependent memory (ECDM) effects using indirect measures of memory have produced inconsistent findings. We report three experiments that examined ECDM in an indirect memory paradigm (word-fragment completion) using ambient odours as environmental contexts. Expt 1 manipulated the odour present at learning and testing (rosemary or lemon) to produce reinstated-context or switched-context conditions. Reinstating rosemary led to a striking ECDM effect, indicating that indirect memory testing can be sensitive to ECDM manipulations. Odour ratings also indicated that rosemary induced a more unpleasant mood in participants than lemon. Expt 2 assessed the influence on indirect retrieval of odour-based mood induction as well as odour distinctiveness, and indicated that rosemary's capacity to promote ECDM effects appears to arise from an additive combination of its unpleasantness-inducing properties and its distinctiveness. Expt 3 partially supported these proposals. Overall, our findings indicate that some odours are capable of producing ECDM effects using indirect testing procedures. Moreover, it appears that it is the inherent proprieties of odours on dimensions such as unpleasantness and distinctiveness that mediate the emergence of ECDM effects, thereby explaining the particular potency of rosemary's mnemonic influence when it is reinstated.

KW - MOOD-DEPENDENT MEMORY

KW - IMPLICIT MEMORY

KW - ENVIRONMENTAL CONTEXT

KW - VISUAL DISTINCTIVENESS

KW - RETENTION

KW - RECALL

KW - MUSIC

KW - ASSOCIATIONS

KW - INFORMATION

KW - FAMILIARITY

U2 - 10.1348/000712609X479663

DO - 10.1348/000712609X479663

M3 - Journal article

VL - 101

SP - 655

EP - 678

JO - British Journal of Psychology

JF - British Journal of Psychology

SN - 0007-1269

IS - 4

ER -