Study finds proof that humans react to pheromones
Study finds proof that humans react to pheromones
March 11, 1998
Web posted at: 8:59 p.m. EST (0159 GMT)
(CNN) -- The power of smell is undeniable, as the multi-billion dollar
perfume industry testifies. But is it possible that humans are
influenced by airborne chemicals undetectable as odors, called
pheromones?
Though any number of animals and insects use pheromones to communicate
with each other about important things such as food, territory and sex,
the idea that humans might be similarly influenced has been
controversial among scientists.
But now, researchers at the University of Chicago say they have the first proof that humans produce and react to pheromones.
In findings published in the journal Nature, researchers say they found
that female ovulation can be regulated -- made longer or shorter --
through the use of pheromones.
"The pheromones regulate the time of ovulation. There are two pheromones
-- one that makes ovulation more likely and the other that suppresses
it and makes it less likely," said Martha McClintock of the University
of Chicago.
There could be important practical implications from this finding.
Because pheromones influence the release of eggs, researchers say they
may provide a more natural way of preventing pregnancy or treating
infertility.
However, researchers say more study is needed to find out if there are
other types of pheromones and if they are as powerful in humans as they
are in other species.
One enduring mystery of pheromones is that if they are undetectable by
the human sense of smell, how can humans be influenced by them?
The answer, some researchers believe, is that pheromones are detected by
the same nerve cells in the nose used to detect odor or perhaps by
another structure in the nose called the vomeronasal organ.
Medical Correspondent Rhonda Rowland contributed to this report.
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