psychotherapy
  • Home
  • Mental Health A-Z
    • Community Psychology
      • Cultural Psychology
        • Addiction
          • Abnormal Psychology
        • ADHD, Adult
    • ADHD, Childhood
      • Alcohol Use
    • Anorexia
    • Anxiety
    • APA Format
    • Behavioral Psychology
    • Binge Drinking
    • Binge Eating
    • Biological Psychology
    • Biopsychology
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Brain Health
    • Caffeine Addiction
    • Cannabis Use
    • Child Development
    • Classical Conditioning
    • Clinical Psychology
    • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
    • Cognitive Development
    • Cognitive Psychology
    • Color Psychology
    • Counseling Psychology
    • Cross-Cultural Psychology
    • Depression
    • Depression, Childhood
    • Development Psychology
    • Dreaming
    • Drug Use
    • DSM-5 E
    • Eating Disorders
    • Educational Psychology
    • Emotional Abuse
    • Agoraphobia
    • Antisocial Personality Disorder(APD)
    • Avoidant Personality Disorder(AVPD)
    • Borderline Personality Disorder
    • Borderline Personality Disorder(BPD)
    • Dependent Personality Disorder(DPD)
    • Brain Health
    • Debates in Psychology
    • Emotions
    • Experimental Psychology
    • Extroversion
    • Forensic Psychology
    • Generalized Anxiety Disorder
    • Goal Setting
    • Grief & Loss
    • Happiness
    • Health Psychology
    • Healthy Aging
    • Hierarchy of Needs
    • Holistic Health
    • Household Stress
    • Inspiration
    • Intelligence
    • Introversion
    • IQ Scores
    • Job Stress
    • Kleptomania
    • Learning Styles
    • LGBTQ
    • Loneliness
    • Mania and Hypomania
    • Marital Issues
    • Meditation
    • Memory
    • Mental Exercises
    • Mental Health Technology
    • Mindfulness
    • Mood Disorders
    • Motivation
    • Narcissistic Personality Disorder(NPD)
    • personality disorder
    • Psychoanalysis
    • Psychology
    • Self-Improvement
    • Relationships
    • Nature vs. Nurture
    • Nicotine Use
    • Nonverbal Communication
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
    • Online Therapy
    • Operant Conditioning
    • Opioid Use
    • Panic Disorder
    • Parenting Styles
    • Passive Aggression
    • Personal Growth
    • Personality Disorders
    • Personality Psychology
    • Personality Types
    • Phobias
    • Positive Psychology
    • Psychoanalysis
    • Psychologist Biographies
    • Psychology 101
    • Psychology Careers
    • Psychology Theories
    • Psychosexual Development
    • Psychosocial Development
    • Psychosocial Psychology
    • Psychotherapy
    • PTSD
    • Quit Smoking
    • Race and Identity
    • Recovery
    • Relationship Stress
    • Relationships
    • Schizophrenia
    • School Psychology
    • Self-Improvement
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder(OCD)
    • Paranoid Personality Disorder(PPD)
    • Schizoid Personality Disorder
    • Schizotypal Personality Disorder(SPD)
    • Selective mutism (SM)
    • Separation anxiety disorder
    • Sex Addiction
    • Sexuality
    • Shopping Addiction
    • Situational Stress
    • Sleep
    • Social Anxiety Disorder
    • Social Learning Theory
    • Social Psychology
    • Spirituality
    • Sports Psychology
    • Stress Management
    • Student Resources
    • Study Guides
    • Suicide
    • Technology Addiction
    • Therapy Types
    • Violence and Abuse
    • Workplace Bullying
    • Specific phobias
    • Sports
    • Stress Management
    • Theories
    • therapy
    • VIEW ALL
  • About Us
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • Mental Health A-Z
    • Community Psychology
      • Cultural Psychology
        • Addiction
          • Abnormal Psychology
        • ADHD, Adult
    • ADHD, Childhood
      • Alcohol Use
    • Anorexia
    • Anxiety
    • APA Format
    • Behavioral Psychology
    • Binge Drinking
    • Binge Eating
    • Biological Psychology
    • Biopsychology
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Brain Health
    • Caffeine Addiction
    • Cannabis Use
    • Child Development
    • Classical Conditioning
    • Clinical Psychology
    • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
    • Cognitive Development
    • Cognitive Psychology
    • Color Psychology
    • Counseling Psychology
    • Cross-Cultural Psychology
    • Depression
    • Depression, Childhood
    • Development Psychology
    • Dreaming
    • Drug Use
    • DSM-5 E
    • Eating Disorders
    • Educational Psychology
    • Emotional Abuse
    • Agoraphobia
    • Antisocial Personality Disorder(APD)
    • Avoidant Personality Disorder(AVPD)
    • Borderline Personality Disorder
    • Borderline Personality Disorder(BPD)
    • Dependent Personality Disorder(DPD)
    • Brain Health
    • Debates in Psychology
    • Emotions
    • Experimental Psychology
    • Extroversion
    • Forensic Psychology
    • Generalized Anxiety Disorder
    • Goal Setting
    • Grief & Loss
    • Happiness
    • Health Psychology
    • Healthy Aging
    • Hierarchy of Needs
    • Holistic Health
    • Household Stress
    • Inspiration
    • Intelligence
    • Introversion
    • IQ Scores
    • Job Stress
    • Kleptomania
    • Learning Styles
    • LGBTQ
    • Loneliness
    • Mania and Hypomania
    • Marital Issues
    • Meditation
    • Memory
    • Mental Exercises
    • Mental Health Technology
    • Mindfulness
    • Mood Disorders
    • Motivation
    • Narcissistic Personality Disorder(NPD)
    • personality disorder
    • Psychoanalysis
    • Psychology
    • Self-Improvement
    • Relationships
    • Nature vs. Nurture
    • Nicotine Use
    • Nonverbal Communication
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
    • Online Therapy
    • Operant Conditioning
    • Opioid Use
    • Panic Disorder
    • Parenting Styles
    • Passive Aggression
    • Personal Growth
    • Personality Disorders
    • Personality Psychology
    • Personality Types
    • Phobias
    • Positive Psychology
    • Psychoanalysis
    • Psychologist Biographies
    • Psychology 101
    • Psychology Careers
    • Psychology Theories
    • Psychosexual Development
    • Psychosocial Development
    • Psychosocial Psychology
    • Psychotherapy
    • PTSD
    • Quit Smoking
    • Race and Identity
    • Recovery
    • Relationship Stress
    • Relationships
    • Schizophrenia
    • School Psychology
    • Self-Improvement
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder(OCD)
    • Paranoid Personality Disorder(PPD)
    • Schizoid Personality Disorder
    • Schizotypal Personality Disorder(SPD)
    • Selective mutism (SM)
    • Separation anxiety disorder
    • Sex Addiction
    • Sexuality
    • Shopping Addiction
    • Situational Stress
    • Sleep
    • Social Anxiety Disorder
    • Social Learning Theory
    • Social Psychology
    • Spirituality
    • Sports Psychology
    • Stress Management
    • Student Resources
    • Study Guides
    • Suicide
    • Technology Addiction
    • Therapy Types
    • Violence and Abuse
    • Workplace Bullying
    • Specific phobias
    • Sports
    • Stress Management
    • Theories
    • therapy
    • VIEW ALL
  • About Us
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
psychotherapy
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

Scent of Newborn Infants Blocks Aggression in Men but Stimulates Aggression in Women

Mozhgan Jamshidi Eyni by Mozhgan Jamshidi Eyni
in Uncategorized
Scent of Newborn Infants Blocks Aggression in Men but Stimulates Aggression in Women

The finding is among the first to provide a direct link between human behavior and a single molecule picked up through the sense of smell.

Summary: Hexadecanal, a molecule excreted by humans, found in abundance on the scalps of babies, sparks behavioral changes in adults who are exposed to it. In women, the molecule decreases connectivity in parts of the brain associated with social decision making, but increases connectivity in males.

Source: Weizmann Institute

Parents of newborns will describe in detail, to anyone willing to listen, the wonder that is their baby’s smell—and they might not be in the wrong. A new study by researchers at the Weizmann Institute of Science suggests that a molecule excreted by humans, and perhaps particularly by babies, plays an important social role: regulating aggression in adults.

The study, led by Dr. Eva Mishor from Prof. Noam Sobel’s research group at Weizmann’s Brain Sciences Department and the Azrieli Institute for Human Brain Imaging and Research, has found that a molecule that can likely be sensed by all mammals, and that is found in abundance on the scalps of newborns, sparks brain and behavioral changes in adults who are exposed to it.

Moreover, the study, published today in Science Advances, found that the molecule affects women one way, and has the opposite effect on men. The molecule, the researchers found, decreases connectivity in parts of the brain that regulate social decision making in women, while in men it increases this connectivity. These brain differences may underlie the different behavioral outcomes.

The finding is among the first to provide a direct link between human behavior and a single molecule picked up through the sense of smell. Furthermore, the diametrically opposed change it effected in women and men sheds new and surprising light on the mediating role sex plays in olfactory perception and its resulting neurological processes.

All animals excrete molecules that give off certain cues that are perceived through our olfactory faculties. Studies have shown that they can also have clear socal and behavioral effects on mammals. However, the science behind how humans are affected by these social cues of chemical communication is still limited.

In their study, Mishor and Sobel focused on a molecule called hexadecanal, or HEX, that humans emit and that most mammals can sense. “We found that HEX has no perceptible odor, but that when you sniff it, it affects the way you behave toward others—specifically, your aggressive responses to others,” explains Mishor.

HEX was previously suggested to be a “social buffering” chemosignaling agent. For example, it reduces stress in mice when excreted by their fellow cagemates. However, the question of whether it plays a similar role in humans was unknown.

The study utilized two validated scientific methods for gauging aggressive behavior in humans, the so-called “aggression paradigms” known as TAP and PSAP. The researchers used the TAP method on about 130 human participants, half of whom were exposed to HEX, and half to a control substance. The PSAP method was used on about 50 additional participants, each exposed to both HEX and the control. The goal was to see if HEX served as a chemosignaling cue that impacted aggressive behavior and associated brain mechanisms.

Both methods have two stages: a provocation stage intended to frustrate participants and a response stage intended to gauge their aggression. Accordingly, the researchers created a computer game to measure the participants’ aggressive behavior. After the participants were exposed to the molecule or to the control substance, they were asked to play two sets of games against what they thought was a person but was actually a computer.

The computer was purposefully annoying, goading its human playmates as a form of provocation. For example, in the first game, which required divvying up money, the computer would offer to keep most of the funds for itself. This game was followed by a second game, which allowed the humans to “punish” their interlocutor with a loud audio blast. This was used as a metric for gauging aggressiveness—the louder the blast, the more aggressive the participant was judged to be.

Mishor found that those that were exposed to HEX exhibited different behaviors from those who were not exposed to it. However, the scientists were surprised to see that the results seemed inconsistent.

“I am very sensitive to matters of gender, and it was very important for me to include women in our study,” notes Mishor. We tend to assume that men and women have, overall, similar brains. But when the researchers took sex into account, they discovered that the different behaviors followed a clear logic: HEX affects men and women differently. While females exposed to the molecule exhibited increased aggression in comparison to female participants in the control group, male participants behaved oppositely, and their aggression decreased.

Why would this molecule affect the sexes differently? Mishor suggests an evolutionary explanation: “Male aggression translates many times into aggression toward newborns; infanticide is a very real phenomenon in the animal kingdom. Meanwhile, female aggression usually translates into defending offspring,” she says, explaining how the sex-differentiated outcome can help babies survive.

To examine this hypothesis, they reached out to researchers in Japan who had been studying babies, specifically the molecules excreted from their scalps. This led them to discover that HEX “is among the most abundant, if not the most abundant molecule in the aromatic bouquet found on a baby’s head,” Sobel mentions.

“Babies cannot communicate through language, so chemical communication is very important for them,” explains Sobel. “As a baby, it is in your interest to make your mom more aggressive and reduce aggressiveness in your dad,” he adds.

To further validate their results, the researchers used the second aggression paradigm method, which allows the imaging of brain activity during the provocation and aggression stages. In this case as well a marked difference was found between men and women.

There is no single area in the brain associated with aggression. Rather, aggressive behavior is linked to networks of communication between different parts of our brain that regulate the way we process social cues and either abide by them or ignore them.

fMRI scanning revealed that though men and women similarly perceive HEX as having no odor, their neurological response to it was radically different. In both sexes HEX activated the left angular gyrus, an area implicated in the integration of social cues. However, the way that it “talked” to other brain regions was sex dependent.

“HEX, it would seem, affects men in that there was more social regulation, their aggression was kept in check and it served as a ‘cool down’ signal for them, while in women the regulation decreased and it can be thought of as a ‘set free’ signal,” explains Mishor. In other words, the communication between the parts of the brain that are in charge of social regulation, and thus help keep aggression in check, differs in men and women.

“Like all mammals, humans sniff themselves and each other all the time,” explains Sobel. Now, perhaps we know the outcome of sniffing newborns and have a better understanding of the mechanisms involved, and of its possible evolutionary role.

Abstract

Sniffing the human body volatile hexadecanal blocks aggression in men but triggers aggression in women

In terrestrial mammals, body volatiles can effectively trigger or block conspecific aggression.

Here, we tested whether hexadecanal (HEX), a human body volatile implicated as a mammalian-wide social chemosignal, affects human aggression. Using validated behavioral paradigms, we observed a marked dissociation: Sniffing HEX blocked aggression in men but triggered aggression in women.

Next, using functional brain imaging, we uncovered a pattern of brain activity mirroring behavior: In both men and women, HEX increased activity in the left angular gyrus, an area implicated in perception of social cues.

HEX then modulated functional connectivity between the angular gyrus and a brain network implicated in social appraisal (temporal pole) and aggressive execution (amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex) in a sex-dependent manner consistent with behavior: increasing connectivity in men but decreasing connectivity in women.

These findings implicate sex-specific social chemosignaling at the mechanistic heart of human aggressive behavior.

About this olfaction and behavior research news

Author: Press Office
Source: Weizmann Institute
Contact: Press Office – Weizmann Institute

Original Research: Open access.
“Sniffing the human body volatile hexadecanal blocks aggression in men but triggers aggression in women” by Eva Mishor et al. Science Advances

The HomePod Smart Speaker Shows The Best and Worst of Apple

March 4, 2023
What is Spiritual Meditation?

What is Spiritual Meditation?

October 27, 2021
Unique Brain Signature of Intimate Partner Aggression Identified

Unique Brain Signature of Intimate Partner Aggression Identified

October 15, 2021
What Is White Privilege?

What Is White Privilege?

September 6, 2021
Arts Activities May Improve Self-Control and Reduce Antisocial Behavior Among Teenagers

Arts Activities May Improve Self-Control and Reduce Antisocial Behavior Among Teenagers

March 24, 2022

Amy Poehler And ‘Parks And Recreation’ Cast Reunite For Galentine’s Day

February 20, 2023
Brain Connectivity Is Lower in Adults With PTSD or a History of Sexual Abuse

Brain Connectivity Is Lower in Adults With PTSD or a History of Sexual Abuse

October 28, 2021

Sleep Triggered by Stress Can Help Mice Cope With Later Anxiety

July 1, 2022

Specific Genes Involved in Schizophrenia Identified for the First Time

April 7, 2022

Winter Blues

June 22, 2021

The Rorschach Inkblot Test

August 7, 2021

The Mathematics of Human Behavior: New Model Can Spot Liars and Counter Disinformation

June 27, 2022

Daily Photo Sharing Might Mean Double Depression Risk

March 13, 2022

Many Adults Inaccurately Perceive Their Own BMI and Body Size

January 28, 2022

Exercise May Reduce Depression Symptoms and Boost Effects of Therapy

April 2, 2022

Why Teens Tune Out to Mom’s Voice

May 5, 2022
psychotherapy

We bring you the best Counseling services around your life quality, be with us and ask for it in live support.

Categories

Kenud Healing Center

  • Healing Center of Kenud , N9 112 , London , Great Britain
  • +447700305907
  • Jamshidi@kenud.com

Recent News

Thyroid Hormones and Blood Sugar Linked to Major Depressive Disorder Severity

Thyroid Hormones and Blood Sugar Linked to Major Depressive Disorder Severity

June 20, 2023
Alterations in Alcohol Consumption Echo Depression Symptom Changes

Alterations in Alcohol Consumption Echo Depression Symptom Changes

June 18, 2023

© 2023 Psychological counseling Services by Dr. Mozhgan Jamshidi Eyni.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Mental Health A-Z
    • Community Psychology
      • Cultural Psychology
    • ADHD, Childhood
      • Alcohol Use
    • Anorexia
    • Anxiety
    • APA Format
    • Behavioral Psychology
    • Binge Drinking
    • Binge Eating
    • Biological Psychology
    • Biopsychology
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Brain Health
    • Caffeine Addiction
    • Cannabis Use
    • Child Development
    • Classical Conditioning
    • Clinical Psychology
    • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
    • Cognitive Development
    • Cognitive Psychology
    • Color Psychology
    • Counseling Psychology
    • Cross-Cultural Psychology
    • Depression
    • Depression, Childhood
    • Development Psychology
    • Dreaming
    • Drug Use
    • DSM-5 E
    • Eating Disorders
    • Educational Psychology
    • Emotional Abuse
    • Agoraphobia
    • Antisocial Personality Disorder(APD)
    • Avoidant Personality Disorder(AVPD)
    • Borderline Personality Disorder
    • Borderline Personality Disorder(BPD)
    • Dependent Personality Disorder(DPD)
    • Brain Health
    • Debates in Psychology
    • Emotions
    • Experimental Psychology
    • Extroversion
    • Forensic Psychology
    • Generalized Anxiety Disorder
    • Goal Setting
    • Grief & Loss
    • Happiness
    • Health Psychology
    • Healthy Aging
    • Hierarchy of Needs
    • Holistic Health
    • Household Stress
    • Inspiration
    • Intelligence
    • Introversion
    • IQ Scores
    • Job Stress
    • Kleptomania
    • Learning Styles
    • LGBTQ
    • Loneliness
    • Mania and Hypomania
    • Marital Issues
    • Meditation
    • Memory
    • Mental Exercises
    • Mental Health Technology
    • Mindfulness
    • Mood Disorders
    • Motivation
    • Narcissistic Personality Disorder(NPD)
    • personality disorder
    • Psychoanalysis
    • Psychology
    • Self-Improvement
    • Relationships
    • Nature vs. Nurture
    • Nicotine Use
    • Nonverbal Communication
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
    • Online Therapy
    • Operant Conditioning
    • Opioid Use
    • Panic Disorder
    • Parenting Styles
    • Passive Aggression
    • Personal Growth
    • Personality Disorders
    • Personality Psychology
    • Personality Types
    • Phobias
    • Positive Psychology
    • Psychoanalysis
    • Psychologist Biographies
    • Psychology 101
    • Psychology Careers
    • Psychology Theories
    • Psychosexual Development
    • Psychosocial Development
    • Psychosocial Psychology
    • Psychotherapy
    • PTSD
    • Quit Smoking
    • Race and Identity
    • Recovery
    • Relationship Stress
    • Relationships
    • Schizophrenia
    • School Psychology
    • Self-Improvement
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder(OCD)
    • Paranoid Personality Disorder(PPD)
    • Schizoid Personality Disorder
    • Schizotypal Personality Disorder(SPD)
    • Selective mutism (SM)
    • Separation anxiety disorder
    • Sex Addiction
    • Sexuality
    • Shopping Addiction
    • Situational Stress
    • Sleep
    • Social Anxiety Disorder
    • Social Learning Theory
    • Social Psychology
    • Spirituality
    • Sports Psychology
    • Stress Management
    • Student Resources
    • Study Guides
    • Suicide
    • Technology Addiction
    • Therapy Types
    • Violence and Abuse
    • Workplace Bullying
    • Specific phobias
    • Sports
    • Stress Management
    • Theories
    • therapy
    • VIEW ALL
  • About Us
  • Contact

© 2023 Psychological counseling Services by Dr. Mozhgan Jamshidi Eyni.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00
  • FR