Tag Archives: the naeum

Engineering smells of childhood memories

I have recently visited an interesting exhibition. It was held by the Naeum, a project group of eight people who study fragrance for empathy. Differently from others interested in developing fancy and welcoming odors, they try to create a wide variety of unique smells and then enjoy them with others. In this exhibition, they introduced a series of uniquely engineered smells that evoke specific childhood memories such as a handful wood, sense of sunshine, cut grass, decay, and painkiller, to name a few. These odors called upon my childhood memories vividly. In fact, Play Doh Cologne does same to many.

This exhibition was divided into multiple sections. In each section, a word or sentence was written on the wall and multiple white-colored ceramic bars were located underneath. These white bars gave off a specific odor which associates the meaning of the word. For instance, the white bars located under the “sense of sunshine” smelled like the detergents or newly washed clothes.

DML_Project Naeum

Among many sections, I enjoyed the “nervous” one the most. It rejuvenated my experience of the dental clinic through cross modal cues (picture). In this section, I sniffed its unique odors from the white bars, I looked at the green operating gown and shiny dental instruments, and I listened to the grinding sound from the speakers all together. I learned that carefully planned and well balanced multi-modal stimuli can make people time travel (see more info at the Crossmodal Research Laboratory).