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Dive into the research topics where Egon Peter Köster is active.

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Featured researches published by Egon Peter Köster.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

A “Misfit” Theory of Spontaneous Conscious Odor Perception (MITSCOP): reflections on the role and function of odor memory in everyday life

Egon Peter Köster; Per Møller; J. Mojet

Our senses have developed as an answer to the world we live in (Gibson, 1966) and so have the forms of memory that accompany them. All senses serve different purposes and do so in different ways. In vision, where orientation and object recognition are important, memory is strongly linked to identification. In olfaction, the guardian of vital functions such as breathing and food ingestion, perhaps the most important (and least noticed and researched) role of odor memory is to help us not to notice the well-known odors or flavors in our everyday surroundings, but to react immediately to the unexpected ones. At the same time it provides us with a feeling of safety when our expectancies are met. All this happens without any smelling intention or conscious knowledge of our expectations. Identification by odor naming is not involved in this and people are notoriously bad at it. Odors are usually best identified via the episodic memory of the situation in which they once occurred. Spontaneous conscious odor perception normally only occurs in situations where attention is demanded, either because the inhaled air or the food smell is particularly good or particularly bad and people search for its source or because people want to actively enjoy the healthiness and pleasantness of their surroundings or food. Odor memory is concerned with novelty detection rather than with recollection of odors. In this paper, these points are illustrated with experimental results and their consequences for doing ecologically valid odor memory research are drawn. Furthermore, suggestions for ecologically valid research on everyday odor memory and some illustrative examples are given.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1998

Implicit Memory for Odors: A Possible Method for Observation

Joachim Degel; Egon Peter Köster

In an experiment 143 subjects were instructed to assign odors to contexts which were displayed in a slide session. The slides depicted contexts from three areas of everyday life which party contained visual cues related to a presented odor. After rating the fit of each odor to a context, the subjects rated the odors for pleasantness. Analysis showed a strong influence of the visual cue on the rating of fit for the contexts containing an odor-related visual element. In contexts without a visual cue, rating of fit showed an influence of implicitly learned memories of odor. The rating was not affected by the pleasantness of the odors. The 1995 work of Schab and Crowder is critically reviewed, and results are discussed within the framework of new, more ecologically oriented research on memory for odor.


Physiology & Behavior | 1989

Temporal integration and reaction times in human smell

P. Overbosch; R.A. de Wijk; Th.J.R. De Jonge; Egon Peter Köster

A model description of intensity perception in human taste and smell developed earlier has now been verified experimentally to determine parameter values for odorants. The final objective is to quantify and understand odour-odour interaction phenomena in e.g., masking, deo-perfumes and flavour enhancement. Five types of olfactometer experiments were carried out, viz. determination of thresholds, determination of reaction times, scaling of perceived intensity after 5 sec stimulation, scaling of perceived intensity of a fixed concentration at variable duration, and measurement of intensity/time relationships. Four subjects were used and the odorants cineole, geraniol and hexane.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1985

Interindividual Differences in Acuity for Odor and Aroma

Konrad J. Burdach; Egon Peter Köster; Jan H.A. Kroeze

To determine the olfactory acuity of 27 subjects a sensory test was presented which was divided into 4 subtests, 2 for nasal and 2 for oral stimulation. Each subtest contained 28 (4 substances × 7 concentrations) olfactory detection tasks (items). The substances used were lemon and rum aroma as well as ethyl butyrate and amyl acetate, the solvents tap water and sugared tap water. Analysis showed that the test provided a clear differentiation between subjects of low, medium, and high olfactory acuity. The intercorrelations among the test substances and the split-half reliabilities of the subtests proved relatively high, whereas only moderate to low intercorrelations among the subtests were found. This was considered an effect of intraindividual variations of olfactory sensitivity. Finally, some conclusions for the construction of acuity tests for odor and aroma are presented.


Behavior Research Methods Instruments & Computers | 1996

AN INJECTION OLFACTOMETER FOR HUMANS AND A NEW METHOD FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF THE SHAPE OF THE OLFACTORY PULSE

René A. De Wijk; Wim Vaessen; Johannes Heidema; Egon Peter Köster

An injection olfactometer for human psychophysical experiments is described. The olfactometer is capable of presenting, either mono- or birhinally, single odorants and binary mixtures. The pulse form of the olfactory stimulus at the exit of the olfactometer approaches a rectangular form, which makes the olfactometer well suited for olfactory reaction time measurements. Since stimulation periods are independent of the subject’s inhalation, time-intensity measurements over prolonged periods of time are possible as well. In the second part of this paper, a new technique is described for the measurement of the stimulus pulse form at the exit of the olfactometer.


Chemical Senses | 2001

Implicit learning and implicit memory for odors: the influence of odor identification and retention time.

Joachim Degel; Dag Piper; Egon Peter Köster


Food Research International | 2015

From mood to food and from food to mood: A psychological perspective on the measurement of food-related emotions in consumer research

Egon Peter Köster; J. Mojet


Chemical Senses | 2005

Does Olfactory Memory Depend on Remembering Odors

Egon Peter Köster


Chemical Senses | 2002

Proactive and Retroactive Interference in Implicit Odor Memory

Egon Peter Köster; Joachim Degel; Dag Piper


Chemosensory Perception | 2012

Same-Different Reaction Times to Odors: Some Unexpected Findings

Per Møller; Egon Peter Köster; Nienke Dijkman; René A. de Wijk; Jos Mojet

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J. Mojet

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Per Møller

Technical University of Denmark

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R.A. de Wijk

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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H.E. Schepers

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Jos Mojet

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Nancy T.E. Holthuysen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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