학술논문

The Scent of Blood: A Driver of Human Behavior?
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS ONE. 9/23/2015, Vol. 10 Issue 9, p1-18. 18p.
Subject
*BLOOD testing
*HUMAN behavior
*PSYCHOLOGY of women
*MENSTRUAL cycle
*EMOTIONS
Language
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
The scent of blood is potentially one of the most fundamental and survival-relevant olfactory cues in humans. This experiment tests the first human parameters of perceptual threshold and emotional ratings in men and women of an artificially simulated smell of fresh blood in contact with the skin. We hypothesize that this scent of blood, with its association with injury, danger, death, and nutrition will be a critical cue activating fundamental motivational systems relating to either predatory approach behavior or prey-like withdrawal behavior, or both. The results show that perceptual thresholds are unimodally distributed for both sexes, with women being more sensitive. Furthermore, both women and men’s emotional responses to simulated blood scent divide strongly into positive and negative valence ratings, with negative ratings in women having a strong arousal component. For women, this split is related to the phase of their menstrual cycle and oral contraception (OC). Future research will investigate whether this split in both genders is context-dependent or trait-like. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]