Science Says You Should Smell The Roses
Doing So Gives Your Brain a Boost
Science says you should Stop and Smell the Roses
Giving your brain a boost while you sleep
New research reveals sleeping nearby a fragrant rose enhances your ability to retain information. Read also on Martha Stewart.com
On a breezy spring day, there’s nothing like taking a few minutes to stop and admire the beautiful blooms around you. As it turns out, stopping and smelling the roses has some pretty impressive cognitive health benefits.
A new study, which was published in Scientific Reports, found that rose scents can help with information retention and learning success—and sleeping with the scent present can even give you brain a boost overnight.
As part of the study, researchers experimented with 50 sixth grade students who studied for a test. Two groups of students were given the same language lessons, which they studied right before bedtime. One group was instructed to place rose scent on their desks while studying, while the control group studied the very same material without a fragrance nearby.
Afterward, the students took a vocabulary test based on the material they reviewed. Researchers placed more scented rose near the test group as a retrieval cue. The students who studied with the rose-scented incense demonstrated stronger information retention than those who did not.
Related: Here’s How Your Messy Home Might Be Affecting Your Sleep
Some students continued to use the rose scent while they slept. When the rose scent was used during both the study and sleeping phases, the students showed a significant increase in learning success by approximately 30 percent. “One particular finding beyond the seminal initial study was that the fragrance also works when it is present all night,” Dr. Jürgen Kornmeier, co-author of the study, said in a statement. “This makes the findings suitable for everyday use.”
The final takeaway? By sleeping nearby a fragrant rose, you may actually give your brain a learning boost, which allows you to retain more information that you learned throughout the day.
As part of the study, researchers experimented with 50 sixth grade students who studied for a test.
Two groups of students were given the same language lessons, which they studied right before bedtime.
One group was instructed to place rose scent on their desks while studying, while the control group studied the very same material without a fragrance nearby.
Afterward, the students took a vocabulary test based on the material they reviewed. Researchers placed more scented rose near the test group as a retrieval cue.
The students who studied with the rose-scented incense demonstrated stronger information retention than those who did not.
Related: Here’s How Your Messy Home Might Be Affecting Your Sleep
Some students continued to use the rose scent while they slept. When the rose scent was used during both the study and sleeping phases, the students showed a significant increase in learning success by approximately 30 percent.
“One particular finding beyond the seminal initial study was that the fragrance also works when it is present all night,” Dr. Jürgen Kornmeier, co-author of the study, said in a statement. “This makes the findings suitable for everyday use.”
The final takeaway? By sleeping nearby a fragrant rose, you may actually give your brain a learning boost, which allows you to retain more information that you learned throughout the day.