5 research outputs found

    Chemosignals of stress influence social judgments.

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    Human body odors have important communicative functions regarding genetic identity, immune fitness and general health, but an expanding body of research suggests they can also communicate information about an individual's emotional state. In the current study, we tested whether axillary odors obtained from women experiencing psychosocial stress could negatively influence personality judgments of warmth and competence made about other women depicted in video scenarios. 44 female donors provided three types of sweat samples: untreated exercise sweat, untreated stress sweat and treated stress sweat. After a 'washout' period, a commercial unscented anti-perspirant product was applied to the left axilla only to evaluate whether 'blocking' the stress signal would improve the social evaluations. A separate group of male and female evaluators (n = 120) rated the women in the videos while smelling one of the three types of sweat samples. Women in the video scenes were rated as being more stressed by both men and women when smelling the untreated vs. treated stress sweat. For men only, the women in the videos were rated as less confident, trustworthy and competent when smelling both the untreated stress and exercise sweat in contrast to the treated stress sweat. Women's social judgments were unaffected by sniffing the pads. The results have implications for influencing multiple types of professional and personal social interactions and impression management and extend our understanding of the social communicative function of body odors

    Mean and standard errors of the confidence, trustworthiness and competence ratings of the women depicted in the videos as a function of the sweat odor pairing condition.

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    <p>Mean and standard errors of the confidence, trustworthiness and competence ratings of the women depicted in the videos as a function of the sweat odor pairing condition.</p

    Schematic of the study design for presenting stimuli and collecting data.

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    <p>Across subjects, blocks were counterbalanced so that each odor stimulus was paired with each video twice.</p
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