The Science of Sex: Does the Nose Know?

By: Brie Cadman (View Profile)

Most women have had the mysterious experience of being turned on by a partner’s smell. A friend of mine once told me her ex-boyfriend’s scent made her feel “safe and drawn to him,” and that his smell was so distinct and attractive that even after a sweaty workout, she found him appealing. “The more exercise, the better.”

Though personality and looks definitely play a part in initial attraction, smell may play a larger role than we suspect. That inexplicable “chemistry” you feel with someone who may not fit your normal dating profile? It could be a subconscious scent drawing you to him or her.

Studies have found that how a person smells gives us clues to their genetic make-up, and thus, their potential to be a compatible mate. On a subconscious level, decoding a scent gives us a powerful tool to ensure our kids will be healthy, and our orgasms will be plentiful.

The first study to indicate that chemical signals play a role in attraction was conducted by Claud Wedekind over a decade ago. Forty-four men wore the same T-shirt for three days. They refrained from deodorants and scented soaps so they wouldn’t interfere with their natural smell. Women then sniffed the shirts and indicated which ones smelled the best to them. By comparing the DNA of the women and men, the researchers found that women didn’t just choose their favorite scent randomly. They preferred the scent of man whose major histocompatibility complex (MHC)—a series of genes involved in our immune system—was most different from their own.

Researchers knew to look at the MHC because of its importance in animal’s sexual preferences. In mice, it has long been known that MHC not only helps ward off infection, but it also plays a role in scent and mate selection.

From an evolutionary perspective, choosing a mate with a different immune system makes survival sense. Kids of parents with different immune genes are more likely to be disease-resistant and are therefore more likely to survive. The women in this study also reported liking the scents that reminded them of their current or previous boyfriends, showing that MHC attraction is consistent. And because MHC profiles differ greatly from one person to the next, there is no universally “good” smell. One woman’s Romeo was another woman’s raunchy.

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posted: 05.18.2008
Susan
Can we get the citations to your sources, please?
posted: 02.13.2008
Philip Coffman
Celery works as a pheromone when eaten by men who later perspire from any kind of activity - dancing, working out, etc. It contains androsterone which is released through perspiration. I'm lucky enough to live in Odessa, Ukraine, a city of awesomely beautiful women and, when I go to a club here and dance a little, I have women all over me. It got to the point that one evening, I had to call club security because a woman followed me to the men's room and was pounding on the door trying to get in. Not kidding! It os reported to work on about 85% of the men who eat it and, on about 60% of the women who are around the guy who has eaten it. Its cheap enough. Try it. I juice ot with carrots and apples. Very pleasant taste.
posted: 02.06.2008
BecauseLyndseySpeaks
This is terribly true. I've been known to be drawn to a man simply because I've walked in a man, and a draft of his scent makes me find him in a room. Often times I don't realize what I'm doing until I've found the man. I'm lucky to have found my perfect MHC smell, but there are slightly varying MHC smells that make can make anyone's nose perk up. And this goes for men too. Even without perfume. I was once working out in the gym and a man slightly older than I was at the time walked up to me. I knew it wasn't because I looked great in my sweat pants. There was a reason for being in the gym. But when he came up to me he simply said, "you smell great." Freaked me out. Now that I think about it, maybe I should have been flattered. But it was odd. And he was pretty darn cute.
posted: 01.31.2008
Roxnev Schlarman
I have often wondered about smell, like in school that are coed, if humans are like animals and if the smell of women in heat cause men brain to wander to sex instead of school work.
posted: 01.31.2008
Bruce
This is real stuff, I'm a poster child for this effect. Life can be pretty grim with a woman who doesn't like you any more because she went off the pill after years. There are real implications for guys. Simply stated, if she doesn't like you, it's not your fault. It isn't how you dress or how you act, it's just your MHC. For guys, get up close to as many women as you can so they can get a sniff. The ones that like you will let you know. One way to tell when you have made a connection is the eyes. When a woman makes the connection with your MHC smell, here pupils will dialate. If you are hanging with a woman who's pupils are not dialating around you, get ready to move on. When it really hits her, you can't even tell what color the irises are. For women, this means, one, not hanging around any guys that you wouldn't want to be caught with because when the right smell gets you, logic goes out the window, and two, find a mate when off the pill, for a lasting relationship.
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