University of Chicago researchers establish proof of human pheromones
University of Chicago researchers establish proof of human pheromones
A University of Chicago researcher has established the first
scientific proof for human pheromones, compounds undetectable as odors
but which have a major impact on the timing of ovulation.
The findings will be published Thursday, March 12 in a paper, "Regulation of Ovulation by Human Pheromones," in the journal Nature, by Martha McClintock, Professor of Psychology at the University of Chicago.
"These data demonstrate that humans have the potential to
communicate pheromonally, either by using an unidentified part of the
main olfactory system, or perhaps with a sixth sense, with its own
unique pathway," McClintock writes in the paper, which she co-authored
with Kathleen Stern, a 1992 Ph.D. graduate in psychology from the
University of Chicago who is a researcher in private industry.
Because the pheromones regulate the length of the menstrual cycle
and can help influence the release of eggs, the compounds have the
potential of providing a new, more natural way of preventing pregnancy,
as well as treating infertility.
The work of McClintock and Stern establishes the presence of two
pheromones. One, produced prior to ovulation, shortens the ovarian
cycle, and the second, produced just at ovulation, lengthens the cycle.
McClintock, whose work builds on early studies that showed women
living together develop synchronized menstrual cycles, conducted the
study on 29 women between the ages of 20 and 35 with a history of
regular and spontaneous ovulation.
From nine of the women, the researchers gathered samples of
compounds by placing pads under their arm pits. The women had bathed
without perfumed products and wore the pads for at least eight hours.
The samples were taken at distinct phases of the menstrual cycle
and each pad was cut into four sections, treated with alcohol, and
frozen in a glass vial. The pad portions were then wiped under the noses
of the 20 other women in the group.
The researchers found that "compounds donated by women in the
late follicular phase (the early portion) of their menstrual cycles
accelerated the preovulatory surge of luteninizing hormone (LH) of
recipient women, and shortened their menstrual cycles."
They also found that "Compounds from the same donors, but
collected later (at the time of ovulation) had an opposite effect,
delaying the LH surge of recipients and lengthening their menstrual
cycles."
The researchers found that 68 percent of the women responded to
the follicular pheromones while 68 percent responded to the ovulatory
pheromones. The other women were unaffected by the compounds.
"In addition, the range of response magnitude was considerably
more than variation in cycle- length typical for this age group: cycles
were shortened form one to 14 days and lengthened from one to 12 days,"
the researchers said.
The research follows other studies done in McClintock's
laboratory on rats and the effect of pheromones on their behavior. In
rats, as in other animals, pheromones play a major role in regulating
behavior.
"For example, pheromones affect with whom male and female
hamsters mate, dominance relationships among male elephants, when rat
mothers wean their pups and how they teach pups to distinguish edible
food from poisons, how hamsters recognize individual members of their
social group, and the level of stress experienced by a mouse in a new
environment, which is based on the emotional state of the previous
occupant," McClintock said.
McClintock cautions that humans are probably not as strongly
influenced by pheromones as other animals, particularly in the area of
mating. Many other factors influence the choices people make in romance,
she said.
Her current research does point, however, to a need to expand scientific exploration on the existence of pheromones.
"Well-controlled studies of humans are now needed to determine
whether there are other types of pheromones, whose effects are as far
reaching in humans as they are in other species," she said.
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