Behavioral and Neural Changes Induced by a Blended Essential Oil on Human Selective Attention

Author:

Liu Jieqiong1,Cai Shi2,Chen Danni1,Wu Ke2,Liu Yang1,Zhang Ruqian1,Chen Mei1,Li Xianchun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology and Cognitive Science, Shanghai Changning-ECNU Mental Health Center, East China Normal University, Shanghai 200062, China

2. Daikin (China) Investment Co., Ltd., Shanghai 200062, China

Abstract

Selective attention refers to the selecting and preferential processing of specific information while simultaneously suppressing irrelevant distractors, activities linked to various cognitive skills and academic achievements. The influence of essential oils on the cognition of humans has been extensively explored. However, the effects of essential oils on human selective attention and the underlying neural mechanisms remain unclear. In the present study, participants were divided into a “blended essential oil” group and a “no essential oil” group and enrolled on a negative priming task, including a control condition and a negative priming condition. The event-related potential technique was used to examine the brain mechanisms underlying the blended essential oil effects on human selective attention. Behavioral results showed that individuals responded more quickly in the negative priming condition when exposed to the blended essential oil. In addition, the blended essential oil eliminated the differences in the P300 amplitude in the postcentral area of the brain between the negative priming condition and the control condition. Moreover, the blended essential oil led to stronger functional connectivity during the task. The present study thus suggests that blended essential oil can significantly change brain activity and functional connections in human beings, which may improve human selective attention.

Funder

East China Normal University

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,General Medicine,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology

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