📘 Key Concepts
| Term | Definition |
| Pheromone | A chemical substance produced and released by an organism affecting behaviour or physiology of others of the same species. |
| Olfactory system | Neural system responsible for detecting chemical signals. |
| Vomeronasal organ (VNO) | Accessory olfactory structure proposed to detect pheromones in mammals. |
| Primer pheromones | Cause long-term physiological changes. |
| Signalling pheromones | Trigger immediate behavioural responses. |
📖 Key Studies
1. Wedekind et al. (1995) — The “Sweaty T-Shirt” Study
- Aim: To determine if body odour influences mate preference through genetic compatibility.
- Method: Men wore shirts for two days; women rated odours.
- Results: Women preferred scents of men with dissimilar MHC genes.
- Conclusion: Olfactory cues may influence attraction for genetic diversity.
- Evaluation:
- ✅ Controlled odour conditions
- ❌ Artificial setting
- ✅ Supported evolutionary mate selection
- ✅ Controlled odour conditions
2. Zhou et al. (2014) — Sex Pheromones and Gender Perception
- Aim: To see if AND (male pheromone) and EST (female pheromone) affect perception of gender.
- Method: Participants watched point-light displays of walking figures while exposed to AND or EST.
- Results: AND made participants perceive figures as more masculine; EST as more feminine.
- Conclusion: Pheromones may influence gender perception in humans.
- Evaluation:
- ✅ Controlled exposure
- ❌ Small sample size
- ✅ Suggests subtle human chemosensory communication
- ✅ Controlled exposure
3. Cutler, Friedmann, & McCoy (1998) — Synthetic Pheromones and Sociosexual Behaviour
- Aim: To test if synthetic male pheromones increased sociosexual behaviour.
- Results: Men who added synthetic pheromones to aftershave reported more sexual activity.
- Conclusion: Pheromones may play a role in human sexual behaviour.
- Evaluation:
- ✅ Field-based data
- ❌ Self-reported behaviour (bias)
- ❌ Correlational, not causal
- ✅ Field-based data
| 💡 TOK Links Are human behaviours like attraction biologically determined or socially constructed? Can pheromones be considered a valid “way of knowing” in humans when evidence is inconclusive? |
| 🌍 Real-World Connections Pheromone research informs fragrance design, relationship therapy, and marketing psychology. Genetic compatibility studies help understand mate selection and fertility treatment. |
| ❤️ CAS Links Community projects on gender bias, relationships, or attraction science awareness. Creativity projects: designing “Myth vs Science” presentations on pheromones. |
| 🧪 IA Guidance Potential IA replications: gender perception or scent preference under controlled conditions. Ethics: informed consent, avoidance of deception about sexual stimuli. |
| 🧠 Examiner Tips State whether pheromones in humans are hypothesised or empirically established. Always discuss biological mechanisms (MHC, olfactory cues). Evaluate evidence — it remains correlational and inconclusive in humans. |