Regulation of ovulation by human pheromones
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 392 (6672) , 177-179
- https://doi.org/10.1038/32408
Abstract
Pheromones are airborne chemical signals that are released by an individual into the environment and which affect the physiology or behaviour of other members of the same species1. The idea that humans produce pheromones has excited the imagination of scientists and the public, leading to widespread claims for their existence, which, however, has remained unproven. Here we investigate whether humans produce compounds that regulate a specific neuroendocrine mechanism in other people without being consciously detected as odours (thereby fulfilling the classic definition of a pheromone). We found that odourless compounds from the armpits of women in the late follicular phase of their menstrual cycles accelerated the preovulatory surge of luteinizing hormone of recipient women and shortened their menstrual cycles. Axillary (underarm) compounds from the same donors which were collected later in the menstrual cycle (at ovulation) had the opposite effect: they delayed the luteinizing-hormone surge of the recipients and lengthened their menstrual cycles. By showing in a fully controlled experiment that the timing of ovulation can be manipulated, this study provides definitive evidence of human pheromones.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Menstrual synchrony under optimal conditions: Bedouin families.Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1997
- Human menstrual synchrony: A critical assessmentNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 1993
- A coupled-oscillator model of ovarian-cycle synchrony among female ratsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1992
- Menstrual synchronyHuman Nature, 1991
- Inter-litter competition and communal nursing among Norway rats: advantages of birth synchronyBehavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 1990
- Estrous synchrony: Modulation of ovarian cycle length by female pheromonesPhysiology & Behavior, 1984
- Social Control of the Ovarian Cycle and the Function of Estrous SynchronyAmerican Zoologist, 1981
- Luteal phase defects: A possible relationship between short hyperthermic phase and sporadic sexual behavior in womenHormones and Behavior, 1979
- Grouped Female Mice: Demonstration of PseudopregnancyBiology of Reproduction, 1977
- Menstrual Synchrony and SuppressionNature, 1971