Abstract

Several physical features influence the perception of how cooperative a potential partner is. While previous work focused on face and voice, it remains unknown whether body odours influence judgements of cooperativeness and if odour-based judgements are accurate. Here, we first collected axillary odours of cooperative and uncooperative male donors through a public good game and used them as olfactory stimuli in a series of tasks examining whether and how they influence cooperative decision-making in an incentivized economic game and ratings of cooperativeness. Our results show that having access to the donor's body odours provided a strategic advantage to women during economic decisions (but not to men): with age, women were more likely to cooperate with cooperative men and to avoid interacting with uncooperative men. Ratings of cooperativeness were nonetheless unrelated to the donors' actual cooperativeness. Finally, while men with masculine and intense body odours were judged less cooperative, we found no evidence that donors' actual cooperativeness was associated with less masculine or less intense body odour. Overall, our findings suggest that, as faces and voices, body odours influence perceived cooperativeness and might be used accurately and in a non-aware manner as olfactory cues of cooperativeness, at least by women.

Highlights

  • Many human interactions necessitate judging strangers and whether to cooperate with them or not

  • The interaction between women's Own Age and Donor Cooperativeness was significantly associated with their Cooperative Decisions (β = 0.16, SE = 0.07, X2 = 5.37, df = 1, p = .020, Table S3) and indicated that with age women were more likely to cooperate with the high cooperative men and less likely to cooperate with the low cooperative men (Figure 1)

  • Cooperative behaviours and facial and vocal characteristics have been discussed to be associated in men through a pleiotropic effect of testosterone levels (O’Connor & Barclay, 2017; Stirrat & Perrett, ; Tognetti et al, 2013, 2019)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Many human interactions necessitate judging strangers and whether to cooperate with them or not. 1997) and its concentration in human fluids (axillary sweat, plasma) appears to be sexually dimorphic (Brooksbank et al, 1972; Jackman & Noble, 1983) This androgen compound is a likely cue of dominance and threat in men (Banner & Shamay-­Tsoory, 2018; Frey et al, 2012) and is expected to influence inter-­personal decision-­making including decisions to cooperate or not with a potential partner (Banner & Shamay-­Tsoory, 2018). We further examined the possible perceptual mechanisms underlying cooperativeness detection, by relating participants’ ratings of intensity, masculinity, pleasantness, and familiarity of the odours of their partners with decisions and ratings regarding cooperativeness

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