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Little Red Riding Hood and the Smell of Fear

Odorama January 2020

In januari, we smelled the flowers that caused Riding Hood to go off her trail and sense the Wolf's fur. How can smell be used to tell a story?  Can smell enhance the experience of a fairytale? And did you know amusement parks and cinemas use smells to influence guests? 

We also were fascinated by the smell of fear. Twenty men from twenty different parts of the world, with completely different backgrounds, have one thing in common: they suffer from severe phobia. Tolaas' research project started in 2005 when these twenty men were given a small, custom made device to carry around with them at all times. When a man would feel a fear attack coming on, he would place the device under his armpit and the equipment would suck in the sweat and register its molecules. This information would be sent to Tolaas, who then simulated the sweat in her Re_searchLab in Berlin. The sweat molecules were reproduced and micro-encapsulated using nanotechnology. This meant that the molecules were safely enclosed in micro-units, which can only be activated by touch. These micro-units were then integrated into a transparent, neutral smelling binder, and applied to a wall without any clear borders except for a little markation in the left corner of each area. This resembles the randomness of bodies moving next to each other. By touching the wall, the smells are released.