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The Gay Brain
Gay Men Respond Differently to Pheromones
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The sexual area of a gay man's brain works a lot like that
of a woman when exposed to a particular stimulus, researchers say.
In an experiment, men and heterosexual women sniffed a chemical from
the male hormone testosterone. The homosexual men's brains responded differently
from those of heterosexual males, and in a similar way to the women's brains.
"It is one more piece of evidence ... that is showing that sexual
orientation is not all learned," said Sandra Witelson, an expert on brain
anatomy and sexual orientation at the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine
at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada.
Witelson, who was not part of the research team, said the findings clearly
show a biological involvement in sexual orientation.
The study, published in Tuesday's issue of Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, was done by researchers at the Karolinska Institute
in Stockholm, Sweden.
They exposed heterosexual men and women and homosexual men to chemicals
derived from male and female sex hormones. These chemicals are thought
to be pheromones — molecules known to trigger responses such as defense
and sex in many animals.
Whether humans respond to pheromones has been debated, although in 2000
American researchers reported finding a gene that they believe directs
a human pheromone receptor in the nose.
The brains of different groups responded similarly to ordinary odors
such as lavender, but differed in their response to the chemicals thought
to be pheromones, lead researcher Ivanka Savic said.
The Swedish researchers divided 36 subjects into three groups
— heterosexual men, heterosexual women and homosexual men. They studied
the brain response to sniffing the chemicals, using PET scans. All the
subjects were healthy, unmedicated, right-handed and HIV-negative.
When they sniffed scents like cedar or lavender, all of the subjects'
brains reacted only in the olfactory region that handles smells.
But when confronted by a chemical from testosterone, the male hormone,
portions of the brains active in sexual activity were activated in straight
women and in gay men, but not in straight men, the researchers found.
The response in gay men and straight women was concentrated in the hypothalamus
with a maximum in the preoptic area that is active in hormonal and sensory
responses necessary for sexual behavior, the researchers said.
When the female hormone estrogen was used, there was only a response
in the olfactory portion of the brains of straight women. Homosexual men
had their primary response also in the olfactory area, with a very small
reaction in the hypothalamus, while heterosexual men responded strongly
in the reproductive region of the brain.
Savic said the group is also doing a study involving homosexual women,
but those results are not yet complete.
In a separate study looking at response to body odors, researchers in
Philadelphia found sharp differences between gay and straight men and women.
"Our findings support the contention that gender preference has a biological
component that is reflected in both the production of different body odors
and in the perception of and response to body odors," said neuroscientist
Charles Wysocki, who led the study.
It's hard to see how a simple choice to be gay or lesbian would influence
the production of body odor, he said.
Wysocki's team at the Monell Chemical Senses Center studied the response
of 82 heterosexual and homosexual men and heterosexual and homosexual women
to the odors of underarm sweat collected from 24 donors of varied gender
and sexual orientation.
They found that gay men differed from heterosexual men and women and
from lesbian women, both in terms of which body odors gay men preferred
and how their own body odors were regarded by the other groups.
Gay men preferred odors from gay men, while odors from gay men were
the least preferred by heterosexual men and women and by lesbian women
in the study. Their findings, released Monday, are to be published in the
journal Psychological Science in September.
The Swedish research was funded by the Swedish Medical Research Council,
the Karolinska Institute and the Magnus Bergvall Foundation. Wysocki's
research was supported by the Monell Center.
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