Publications by authors named "Diane Rekow"

Article Synopsis
  • The Social Odor Scale (SOS) is a 12-item questionnaire designed to assess how people perceive social odors from others, focusing on romantic partners, familiar people, and strangers.
  • The study aimed to validate the SOS in several languages (French, English, Dutch, Swedish, Chinese) and found that its structure remained consistent across these translations.
  • Results revealed differences in social odor awareness by language group, with Swedish participants showing the least awareness and Chinese participants the most, while geographical factors also influenced scores, linking higher latitudes to lower social odor awareness.
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Article Synopsis
  • Infants use intersensory facilitation, particularly the principle of inverse effectiveness, to help navigate their environment, especially under high unisensory demand.
  • This study investigates whether olfactory cues, specifically a mother's body odor, can enhance visual processing of faces in 4-month-old infants, depending on the complexity of the visual stimuli.
  • Results indicate that maternal odor boosts infants' ability to categorize faces in more challenging visual scenarios, supporting the idea that olfactory information can facilitate visual perception during early development.
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During infancy, intersensory facilitation declines gradually as unisensory perception develops. However, this trade-off was mainly investigated using audiovisual stimulations. Here, fifty 4- to 12-month-old infants (26 females, predominately White) were tested in 2017-2020 to determine whether the facilitating effect of their mother's body odor on neural face categorization, as previously observed at 4 months, decreases with age.

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Voices are the most relevant social sounds for humans and therefore have crucial adaptive value in development. Neuroimaging studies in adults have demonstrated the existence of regions in the superior temporal sulcus that respond preferentially to voices. Yet, whether voices represent a functionally specific category in the young infant's mind is largely unknown.

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In the current study, we examined the role of task-related top-down mechanisms in the recognition of facial expressions. An expression of increasing intensity was displayed at a frequency of 1.5 Hz among the neutral faces of the same model that was displayed at a frequency of 12 Hz (i.

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Infants' ability to discriminate facial expressions has been widely explored, but little is known about the rapid and automatic ability to discriminate a given expression against many others in a single experiment. Here we investigated the development of facial expression discrimination in infancy with fast periodic visual stimulation coupled with scalp electroencephalography (EEG). EEG was recorded in eighteen 3.

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Visual categorization is the brain ability to rapidly and automatically respond to a certain category of inputs. Whether category-selective neural responses are purely visual or can be influenced by other sensory modalities remains unclear. Here, we test whether odors modulate visual categorization, expecting that odors facilitate the neural categorization of congruent visual objects, especially when the visual category is ambiguous.

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The human brain rapidly and automatically categorizes faces vs. other visual objects. However, whether face-selective neural activity predicts the subjective experience of a face - perceptual awareness - is debated.

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Understanding how the young infant brain starts to categorize the flurry of ambiguous sensory inputs coming in from its complex environment is of primary scientific interest. Here, we test the hypothesis that senses other than vision play a key role in initiating complex visual categorizations in 20 4-mo-old infants exposed either to a baseline odor or to their mother's odor while their electroencephalogram (EEG) is recorded. Various natural images of objects are presented at a 6-Hz rate (six images/second), with face-like object configurations of the same object categories (i.

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The influence of odor valence on expressive-face perception remains unclear. Here, three "valenced" odor contexts (pleasant, unpleasant, control) were diffused while scalp electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded in 18 participants presented with expressive faces alternating at a 6-Hz rate. One facial expression (happiness, disgust or neutrality) repeatedly arose every 6 face pictures to isolate its discrimination from other expressions at 1 Hz and harmonics in the EEG spectrum.

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Sex categorization is essential for mate choice and social interactions in many animal species. In humans, sex categorization is readily performed from the face. However, clear neural markers of face-sex categorization, i.

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Humans exhibit a marked specialization to process the most experienced facial morphologies. In particular, nonhuman primate faces are poorly discriminated compared to human faces in behavioral tasks. So far however, a clear and consistent marker that quantifies our expertise in human over monkey face discrimination directly from brain activity is lacking.

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Article Synopsis
  • The human brain learns to categorize visual stimuli, like faces, despite physical differences and this process is influenced by multisensory inputs, notably olfaction.
  • Infants can process and categorize facial signals more effectively in the presence of their mother's body odor, suggesting that olfactory cues enhance visual recognition.
  • The research supports the idea that multisensory experiences play a crucial role in the early development of perceptual categorization in infants, revealing insights into how they interact with their environment.
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