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Our brain constantly combines multisensory information from our surrounding environment. Odors for instance are often perceived with visual cues; these sensations interact to form our own subjective experience. This integration process can have a profound impact on the resulting experience and can alter our subjective reality. Crossmodal correspondences are the consistent associations between stimulus features in different sensory modalities. These correspondences are presumed to be bidirectional in nature and have been shown to influence our perception in a variety of different sensory modalities. Vision is dominant in our multisensory perception and can influence how we perceive information in our other senses, including olfaction. We explored the effect that different odors have on human color perception by presenting olfactory stimuli while asking observers to adjust a color patch to be devoid of hue (neutral gray task). We found a shift in the perceived neutral gray point to be biased toward warmer colors. Four out of five of our odors also trend toward their expected crossmodal correspondences. For instance, when asking observers to perform the neutral gray task while presenting the smell of cherry, the perceptually achromatic stimulus was biased toward a red-brown. Using an achromatic adjustment task, we were able to demonstrate a small but systematic effect of the presence of odors on human color perception.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1175703 | DOI Listing |
Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging
August 2025
Department of pain, the Southwest hospital, Army Medical University, Chongqing 400038, China; College of General Education and International, Chongqing Polytechnic University of Electronic Technology, Chongqing 401331, China. Electronic address:
Objective: Major depressive disorder (MDD) has become the second largest risk factor affecting human health, with a progress in its treatment especially non-pharmacological therapies. The loving-kindness meditation (LKM) has been introduced to depression but is not popular due to requirement on awareness and concentration, and its utilization in clinical MDD is absent as well as exploration on neural mechanism. This study aims to develop a more feasible novel therapy-loving-kindness meditation integrating cognition and behavior (LKM-CB), examine its effect on clinical depression, and further explore its neural mechanism by multimodal neuroimaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
August 2025
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
The first search for a heavy neutral spin-1 gauge boson (Z^{'}) with nonuniversal fermion couplings produced via vector boson fusion processes and decaying to tau leptons or W bosons is presented. The analysis is performed using LHC data at sqrt[s]=13 TeV, collected from 2016 to 2018 with the CMS experiment and corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 138 fb^{-1}. The data are consistent with the standard model predictions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
August 2025
School of Gemmology, China University of Geosciences (Beijing), Beijing, China.
Color is the most critical factor in determining the value of gem-quality spinel. This paper examines the color mechanism and the colorimetric characteristics of spinel crystals under D65 and A light sources against nine neutral backgrounds. It also explores color clustering for over 400 spinel crystals in yellow, red, purple, and blue hues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis
May 2025
Color is linked to emotions, with the strongest link between red and anger. This study primarily addressed whether a red background increases perceived facial angriness, using a method that did not require explicit processing of either color or emotional expression, in participants of two ethnicities (Caucasian and Japanese) and genders (female and male). Their task was to adjust the expression on a face to neutral.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Opt Soc Am A Opt Image Sci Vis
May 2025
We investigated how the chromatic properties of background surfaces affect color constancy using two-dimensional stimuli in a haploscopic view. The reference and test stimuli, illuminated by D65 and chromatic illuminants (red, green, blue, and yellow), consisted of a central 1.2° test patch, a 4.
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