January 12, 2008
Scratch and Sniff Internet Dating
In the Economist:
ONE of life's little mysteries is why particular people fancy each other—or, rather, why they do not when on paper they ought to. One answer is that human consciousness, and thus human thought, is dominated by vision. Beauty is said to be in the eye of the beholder, regardless of the other senses. However, as the multi-billion-dollar perfume industry attests, beauty is in the nose of the beholder, too.
ScientificMatch.com, a Boston-based internet-dating site launched in December, was created to turn this insight into money. Its founder, an engineer (and self-confessed serial dater) called Eric Holzle is drawing on an observation made over a decade ago by Claus Wedekind, a researcher at the University of Bern, in Switzerland.
In his original study Dr Wedekind recruited female volunteers to sniff men's three-day-old T-shirts and rate them for attractiveness. He then analysed the men's and women's DNA, looking in particular at the genes that build a part of the immune system known as the major histocompatability complex (MHC). Dr Wedekind knew, from studies on mice, that besides fending off infection, the MHC has a role in sexual attractiveness. It changes odours in ways the mice can detect (with mice, the odours are in the urine), and that detection is translated into preferences for particular mates. What is true for mice is often true for men, so he had a punt on the idea that the MHC might affect the smell of human sweat, as well.
Posted by Robin Varghese at 03:38 PM | Permalink





Comments
Robin, you've been batting 1000 lately, with massively useful and fascinating posts. This is a brilliant idea, and I wish every success on Dr. Wedekind. I cannot forbear to point out a delightful fact -- his namesake, the dramatist Wedekind, penned _Lulu_, an early modern eyebrow-raiser about a classic femme fatale.
Posted by: Elatia Harris | Jan 12, 2008 9:53:26 PM
"Indeed, the only people for whom MHC matching might not be expected to work are women on the Pill. Chemical contraception, which mimics pregnancy, messes up the system because of an intriguing twist. When women are pregnant, they prefer the smell of MHCs that are similar to their own."
Wow. So... when a woman goes off the pill, does she suddenly find her current partner less attractive? At a time when they're usually attempting to conceive? How horribly awkward!
Posted by: Nick Smyth | Jan 12, 2008 11:18:16 PM
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