>===== Original Message From "Mark S. Schmidt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
=====
Colleagues,
I just got a request from a local reporter asking if I knew
of any research on a possible association between Holiday
odors (odors associated with the Fall holidays of
Thanksgiving & Christmas) and emotions and memory. The request was
a little vague, but I gathered that she is doing a piece on how the
smells of Fall and the holidays might affect emotions and
bring back fond memories of childhood Christmases, etc.  I took a
chance and said I'd try to find something for her. Is anyone familiar
with any research along these lines?  I remember a little about
Robert Baron's work on odors and helping behavior, but that's about
it.  I'm going to hit the databases tomorrow but any help that the
wise sages of TIPS could provide would be greatly appreciated!!  I'll
share what I find with the list.  Thanks!
Mark


Mark -

I don't have any research on odors & memories, per se, but I think there are 
two approaches you could take.

First the cognitive concepts of encoding specificity and retrieval cues could 
apply.  The retrieval cue would be the odor (cues us to remember the event, 
emotion, or holiday).  And if the cue is really distinctive and hasn't been 
associated with other memories, then the cue should help us recall a specific 
event (i.e., be encoding specific).

Second (and I think more probable), the odor-event association may be 
classically conditioned, where the odor is the CS and the event is the US/UCS.

Hope this helps!

Kirsten

Kirsten L. Rewey
Department of Psychology
St. Mary's University of Minnesota
700 Terrace Heights, Box 1464
Winona, Minnesota  55987

Office:  (507) 457-6991
Fax:  (507) 457-1633

Reply via email to