Journal article

Olfactory and visual vs. multimodal landmark processing in human wayfinding: a virtual reality experiment


Authors listArena, Elisa; Hamburger, Kai

Publication year2023

Pages688-709

JournalJournal of Cognitive Psychology

Volume number35

Issue number6-7

ISSN2044-5911

eISSN2044-592X

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1080/20445911.2023.2248685

PublisherTaylor and Francis Group


Abstract
Recent studies suggest that the olfactory system is not as indiscriminative as previously thought. Odours can serve as useful landmark information. The current study explored recognition and wayfinding performance in 54 participants (52 at t2), who either received 18 unimodal (only visual or olfactory) or multimodal (visual-olfactory) landmark information during a learning phase in a virtual reality maze before finding their way through it. Recognition performance was assessed in a recognition task (18 targets, 18 distractors). The experiment was repeated after one month. As expected, participants showed poorer recognition performance if presented with odours compared to the other two conditions. But, recognition performance did not decline over time. Wayfinding performance was similar across all conditions. However, odours were the only condition with stable performance over time, possibly due to emotional mediation and deeper processing. Multimodal material added no value to wayfinding performance, supposedly due to higher cognitive load.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleArena, E. and Hamburger, K. (2023) Olfactory and visual vs. multimodal landmark processing in human wayfinding: a virtual reality experiment, Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 35(6-7), pp. 688-709. https://doi.org/10.1080/20445911.2023.2248685

APA Citation styleArena, E., & Hamburger, K. (2023). Olfactory and visual vs. multimodal landmark processing in human wayfinding: a virtual reality experiment. Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 35(6-7), 688-709. https://doi.org/10.1080/20445911.2023.2248685



Keywords


COGNITIVE MAPSmemory effectsMODALITYODORSRETENTIONsensory modalitiessmellWayfinding

Last updated on 2025-01-04 at 22:55