Tillotson, Jenny and Lahiri, Kim and Rolland, Marc (2014) The Oneiric Reality of Electronic Scents. In: Futurescan 2: Collective Voices. Association of Fashion & Textiles Courses, pp. 74-89. ISBN 9781907382642
Type of Research: | Book Section | ||||||||
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Creators: | Tillotson, Jenny and Lahiri, Kim and Rolland, Marc | ||||||||
Description: | This paper investigates the ‘oneiric’ dimension of scent, by suggesting a new design process that can be worn as a fashion accessory or integrated in textile technologies, to subtly alter reality and go beyond our senses. It fuses wearable ‘electronic scent’ delivery systems with pioneering biotechnologies as a ground-breaking ‘science fashion’ enabler. The purpose is to enhance wellbeing by reaching a day‐dream state of being through the sense of smell. The sense of smell (or olfaction) is a chemical sense and part of the limbic system which regulates emotion and memory within the brain. The power of scent makes content extremely compelling by offering a heightened sense of reality which is intensified by emotions such as joy, anger and fear. Scent helps us appreciate all the senses as we embark on a sensory journey unlike any other; it enhances mood, keeps us in the moment, diverts us from distractions, reduces boredom and encourages creativity. This paper highlights the importance of smell, the forgotten sense, and also identifies how we as humans have grown to underuse our senses. It endeavours to show how the reinvention of our sensory faculties is possible through advances in biotechnology. It introduces the new ‘data senses’ as a wearable sensory platform that triggers and fine tunes the senses with fragrances. It puts forward a new design process that is currently being developed in clothing elements, jewellery and textile technologies, offering a new method to deliver scent electronically and intelligently in fashion and everyday consumer products. It creates a personal ‘scent wave’, around the wearer, to allow the mind to wander, to give a deeper sense of life or ‘lived reality’ (verses fantasy), a new found satisfaction and confidence, and to reach new heights of creativity. By combining biology with wearable technologies, we propose a biotechnological solution that can be translated into sensory fashion elements. This is a new trend in 21st century ‘data sensing’, based on holographic biosensors that sense the human condition, aromachology (the science of the effect of fragrance and behaviour), colour-therapy, and smart polymer science. The use of biosensors in the world of fashion and textiles, enables us to act on visual cues or detect scent signals and rising stress levels, allowing immediate information to hand. An ‘oneiric’ mood is triggered by a spectrum of scents which is encased in a micro-computerised ‘scent‐cell’ and integrated into clothing elements or jewellery. When we inhale an unexpected scent, it takes us by surprise; the power of fragrance fills us with pleasurable ripples of multi‐sensations and dream‐like qualities. The aromas create a near trance‐like experience that induces a daydream state of (immediate) satisfaction, or a ‘revived reality’ in our personal scent bubble of reality. The products and jewellery items were copyrighted and designed by Slim Barrett and the technology input was from EG Technology and Epigem. |
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Official Website: | http://www.ftc-online.org.uk | ||||||||
Additional Information (Publicly available): | This paper is published in the 2013 conference proceedings for the Futurescan2 Collective Voices series as part of the FTC annual conference hosted by Sheffield Hallam University in January 2013. The products and jewellery items are designed and copyrighted by Slim Barrett. |
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Keywords/subjects not otherwise listed: | day dream, mindfulness, reality, scent, aromachology | ||||||||
Publisher/Broadcaster/Company: | Association of Fashion & Textiles Courses | ||||||||
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Central Saint Martins Research Centres No Longer Active > Textiles Futures Research Centre (TFRC) Research Projects > Scentsory Design® |
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Date: | 3 January 2014 | ||||||||
Funders: | Arts & Humanities Research Council Knowledge Transfer Fellowship, Cambridge Enterprise | ||||||||
Date Deposited: | 17 Jun 2014 10:20 | ||||||||
Last Modified: | 04 Sep 2015 21:38 | ||||||||
Item ID: | 6818 | ||||||||
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/6818 |
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