Le blog du CTD, par Bertrand Damien


Chers CTDistes, chers amis, bienvenue sur le blog du CTD. Humeurs, billets d'actualité, coups de coeurs et de bourre, ou simplement plaisantes conneries du 1 au 10ème degré.

Nom : Bertrand
Lieu : France

Musicien, compositeur, auteur, et Producteur de musique (label ESP Music). J'ai travaillé 20 ans dans l'industrie des télécommunications, et j'étais encore récemment Directeur d'un département de conseil en stratégie pour les opérateurs. Maintenant, musique...

10.5.05

Ces petites odeurs qui nous gouvernent...

Sans le faire exprès, 2 de mes récents posts se téléscopent : entre "le cerveau a-t-il un sexe" et "l'homosexualité est-elle naturelle", un point commun dans le New York Times de ce matin : l'IRM, cette technique qui ne cesse de lever le voile sur le plus grand mystère de l'homme, son cerveau.

Voici quelques extraits du sujet :

"...Using a brain imaging technique, Swedish researchers have shown that homosexual and heterosexual men respond differently to two odors that may be involved in sexual arousal, and that the gay men respond in the same way as women.

The new research may open the way to studying human pheromones, as well as the biological basis of sexual preference. Pheromones, chemicals emitted by one individual to evoke some behavior in another of the same species, are known to govern sexual activity in animals, but experts differ as to what role, if any, they play in making humans sexually attractive to one another. The new research, which supports the existence of human pheromones, is reported in today's issue of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by Dr. Ivanka Savic and colleagues at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.

(...)

The estrogen-like compound, though it activated the usual smell-related regions in women, lighted up the hypothalamus in men. This is a region in the central base of the brain that governs sexual behavior and, through its control of the pituitary gland lying just beneath it, the hormonal state of the body.

The male sweat chemical, on the other hand, did just the opposite; it activated mostly the hypothalamus in women and the smell-related regions in men. The two chemicals seemed to be leading a double life, playing the role of odor with one sex and of pheromone with another.

The Swedish researchers have now repeated the experiment but with the addition of gay men as a third group. The gay men responded to the two chemicals in the same way as did women, Dr. Savic reports, as if the hypothalamus's response is determined not by biological sex but by the owner's sexual orientation..."


Bref, l'IRM n'a pas fini de nous en faire voir de toutes les couleurs et de toutes les odeurs. Reste à faire un peu d'IRM chez les Gorilles et les Bonobo gays, pour voir ce que ça donne...