4.8 Article

Smelling of odorous sex hormone-like compounds causes sex-differentiated hypothalamic activations in humans

Journal

NEURON
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 661-668

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/S0896-6273(01)00390-7

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The anatomical pathways for processing of odorous stimuli include the olfactory nerve projection to the olfactory bulb, the trigerminal nerve projection to somatosensory and insular cortex, and the projection from the accessory olfactory bulb to the hypothalamus. In the majority of tetrapods, the sex-specific effects of pheromones on reproductive behavior is mediated via the hypothalamic projection. However, the existence of this projection in humans has been regarded as improbable because humans lack a discernable accessory olfactory bulb. Here, we show that women smelling an androgen-like compound activate the hypothalamus, with the center of gravity in the preoptic and ventromedial nuclei. Men, in contrast, activate the hypothalamus (center of gravity in paraventricular and dorsomedial nuclei) when smelling an estrogen-like substance. This sex-dissociated hypothalamic activation suggests a potential physiological substrate for a sex-differentiated behavioral response in humans.

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