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SCIENCE REPORT -February 21, 2002: Women and Sense of Smell
By George Grow
This is the VOA Special English SCIENCE REPORT.
Two new American studies are adding to our understanding of women and their sense of smell.
The first study showed that women appear to like the smell of men whose genes1 are
similar to the women’s fathers. Scientists at the University of Chicago in Illinois
described their experiment in Nature Genetics2 magazine.
The scientists asked a group of forty-nine women to smell several boxes. Each box
had a different smell. The women were asked which box they would choose if they
had to smell it all the time. They were not told what each box contained.
The ten boxes contained pieces of clothing called T-shirts. Some of the T-shirts contained a common smell of a
substance3 found around the house. Each of the other six T-shirts had been worn4 by a man for two days. The six
men who wore the T-shirts were told to avoid activities that produced strong smells.
The scientists tested the genes of the men and women in the study. They examined a special group of genes
called M-H-C genes.
The scientists found that the women did not choose smells of men with genes totally similar to their own.
However, women generally liked the smell of men whose M-H-C genes were similar to the genes that were
passed to the women from their fathers. There was no such relationship between a woman and genes from her
mother.
A second study found that women can improve their ability to recognize smells by smelling them repeatedly5.
Scientists at the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, organized this study. They
reported the findings6 in Nature Neuroscience magazine.
The scientists found that men and women were equally7 good at identifying a number of smells at the start of
testing. However, the women became better at recognizing smells the more they were tested. This was not true
for men, boys, girls or older women. Scientists suggest that this ability may be linked to substances8 called
hormones9 produced by women.
Scientists say their findings may explain why women are more likely than men to be troubled by smells in the
environment.
This VOA Special English SCIENCE REPORT was written by George Grow.
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1 genes | |
n.基因( gene的名词复数 ) | |
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2 genetics | |
n.遗传学 | |
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3 substance | |
n.物质,实质,主旨 | |
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4 worn | |
adj.用旧的,疲倦的;vbl.wear的过去分词 | |
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5 repeatedly | |
adv.重复地,再三地 | |
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6 findings | |
n.发现物( finding的名词复数 );调查(或研究)的结果;(陪审团的)裁决 | |
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7 equally | |
adv.平等地;公平地 | |
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8 substances | |
n.物质( substance的名词复数 );实质;物体;[哲学]1)。 本质 | |
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9 hormones | |
n. 荷尔蒙,激素 名词hormone的复数形式 | |
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