Chemosensory Cues to Conspecific Emotional Stress Activate Amygdala in Humans
Author(s) -
Lilianne R. MujicaParodi,
Helmut H. Strey,
Blaise B. Frederick,
Robert L. Savoy,
David Cox,
Yevgeny Botanov,
Denis Tolkunov,
Denis Rubin,
Jochen Weber
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0006415
Subject(s) - amygdala , odor , stressor , psychology , emotional stress , alarm signal , perception , facial expression , olfaction , stress (linguistics) , emotional expression , audiology , olfactory cues , alarm , neuroscience , cognitive psychology , communication , medicine , composite material , materials science , philosophy , linguistics
Alarm substances are airborne chemical signals, released by an individual into the environment, which communicate emotional stress between conspecifics. Here we tested whether humans, like other mammals, are able to detect emotional stress in others by chemosensory cues. Sweat samples collected from individuals undergoing an acute emotional stressor, with exercise as a control, were pooled and presented to a separate group of participants (blind to condition) during four experiments. In an fMRI experiment and its replication, we showed that scanned participants showed amygdala activation in response to samples obtained from donors undergoing an emotional, but not physical, stressor. An odor-discrimination experiment suggested the effect was primarily due to emotional, and not odor, differences between the two stimuli. A fourth experiment investigated behavioral effects, demonstrating that stress samples sharpened emotion-perception of ambiguous facial stimuli. Together, our findings suggest human chemosensory signaling of emotional stress, with neurobiological and behavioral effects.
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