William James Center for Research, ISPA - Instituto Universitário, Lisbon, Portugal.
Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Chem Senses. 2021 Jan 1;46. doi: 10.1093/chemse/bjab005.
It has been shown that the presence of conspecifics modulates human vigilance strategies as is the case with animal species. Mere presence has been found to reduce vigilance. However, animal research has also shown that chemosignals (e.g., sweat) produced during fear-inducing situations modulate individuals' threat detection strategies. In the case of humans, little is known about how exposure to conspecifics' fear chemosignals modulates vigilance and threat detection effectiveness. This study (N = 59) examined how human fear chemosignals affect vigilance strategies and threat avoidance in its receivers. We relied on a paradigm that simulates a "foraging under threat" situation in the lab, integrated with an eye-tracker to examine the attention allocation. Our results showed that the exposure to fear chemosignals (vs. rest chemosignals and a no-sweat condition) while not changing vigilance behavior leads to faster answers to threatening events. In conclusion, fear chemosignals seem to constitute an important warning signal for human beings, possibly leading their receiver to a readiness state that allows faster reactions to threat-related events.
已经表明,同动物物种一样,同种个体的存在会调节人类的警戒策略。研究发现,仅仅有同种个体的存在就能降低警戒。然而,动物研究也表明,在引起恐惧的情况下产生的化学信号(例如汗液)会调节个体的威胁检测策略。就人类而言,对于暴露于同种的恐惧化学信号如何调节警戒和威胁检测的有效性知之甚少。本研究(N=59)考察了人类恐惧化学信号如何影响接收者的警戒策略和回避威胁。我们依赖于一种在实验室中模拟“在威胁下觅食”情景的范式,结合眼动追踪器来检查注意力分配。我们的结果表明,暴露于恐惧化学信号(与休息化学信号和无汗条件相比)虽然不会改变警戒行为,但会导致对威胁事件更快的反应。总之,恐惧化学信号似乎是人类的一个重要警告信号,可能使接收者进入一种准备状态,从而对与威胁相关的事件做出更快的反应。