| Literature DB >> 26834656 |
Smiljana Mutic1, Eileen M Moellers1, Martin Wiesmann1, Jessica Freiherr1.
Abstract
Human body odor is a source of important social information. In this study, we explore whether the sex of an individual can be established based on smelling axillary odor and whether exposure to male and female odors biases chemosensory and social perception. In a double-blind, pseudo-randomized application, 31 healthy normosmic heterosexual male and female raters were exposed to male and female chemosignals (odor samples of 27 heterosexual donors collected during a cardio workout) and a no odor sample. Recipients rated chemosensory samples on a masculinity-femininity scale and provided intensity, familiarity and pleasantness ratings. Additionally, the modulation of social perception (gender-neutral faces and personality attributes) and affective introspection (mood) by male and female chemosignals was assessed. Male and female axillary odors were rated as rather masculine, regardless of the sex of the donor. As opposed to the masculinity bias in the odor perception, a femininity bias modulating social perception appeared. A facilitated femininity detection in gender-neutral faces and personality attributes in male and female chemosignals appeared. No chemosensory effect on mood of the rater was observed. The results are discussed with regards to the use of male and female chemosignals in affective and social communication.Entities:
Keywords: body odor; mood; olfaction; sex; sex recognition; sexual dimorphism
Year: 2016 PMID: 26834656 PMCID: PMC4719098 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Sex-differences in physiological parameters pulse (in BPM) and blood pressure (in mm Hg) for male and female donors.
| Physiological parameter | Sex of the donor | Sex difference | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | Female | |||
| Pulse | Pre | 86.74 (17.07) | 94.67 (12.34) | 0.135 |
| Post | 107.52 (19.85) | 116.72 (16.79) | 0.219 | |
| Systolic blood pressure | Pre | 121.40 (6.94) | 112.56 (8.90) | 0.008∗ |
| Post | 111.40 (8.77) | 106.67 (6.24) | 0.132 | |
| Diastolic blood pressure | Pre | 80.69 (5.70) | 74.21 (8.81) | 0.031∗ |
| Post | 66.19 (6.93) | 65.64 (4.69) | 0.812 | |
Mean values and standard deviations, M (SD), for the odor perception task (masculinity-femininity rating) and social perception tasks (gender-neutral personality attributes and faces) by sex of the rater (male and female) and chemosensory sample (no odor, male chemosignals and female chemosignals).
| Sex of the rater | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemosensory sample | Masculinity-femininity rating | Personality attributes rating | Face rating | |||
| Male | Female | Male | Female | Male | Female | |
| Male chemosignals | 52.00 (13.17) | 37.31 (9.35) | 52.39 (3.65) | 51.75 (3.05) | 55.46 (5.33) | 47.05 (7.46) |
| Female chemosignals | 43.17 (10.75) | 38.53 (19.18) | 50.85 (4.28) | 52.64 (4.81) | 55.17 (7.35) | 46.45 (8.23) |
| No odor sample | 57.10 (11.38) | 52.66 (10.07) | 53.58 (3.98) | 53.40 (3.63) | 56.60 (3.54) | 42.01 (6.87) |