• The interactive role of odor associations in friendship preferences

    From Primum Sapienti@invalide@invalid.invalid to sci.anthropology.paleo on Sun Apr 20 21:50:30 2025
    From Newsgroup: sci.anthropology.paleo


    https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-94350-1
    The interactive role of odor associations
    in friendship preferences

    Abstract
    Who we choose to befriend is highly personal,
    driven by idiosyncratic preferences about
    other individuals, including sensory cues.
    How does a personrCOs unique sensory evaluation
    of othersrCO body odor affect friendship
    formation? Female participants took part in a
    speed-friending event where they made
    judgments of friendship potential (FP)
    following a 4-minute live interaction. Prior
    to and following the speed-friending event,
    participants judged the FP of these women
    based solely on diplomatic odor (including
    daily perfume/hygiene products) presented on
    worn t-shirts. Participants also judged FP
    based on facial appearance (a 100-ms
    presentation of portrait photographs).
    Judgments based solely on diplomatic odor
    predicted FP judgments following in-person
    interactions, beyond the predictive ability
    of photograph-based judgments. Moreover,
    judgments based on the live interaction
    predicted changes in the second round of
    diplomatic odor judgments, suggesting that
    the quality of the live interaction modified
    olfactory perception. Results were driven
    more strongly by idiosyncratic preferences
    than by global perceiver or target effects.
    Findings highlight the dynamic role of
    ecologically relevant social olfactory cues
    in informing friendship judgments, as well
    as the involvement of odor-based associative
    learning during the early stages of
    friendship formation.
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