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Colour vision ended human pheromone use

http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn3835



The development of colour vision may have led to Old World primates, and hence their human descendants, to lose their ability to detect pheromones, suggests a new genetic study.
Pheromones are highly specific scent molecules that many animals rely upon to find and assess a potential mate. But humans appear to make little, if any, use of pheromone signals, says Jianzhi George Zhang, an evolutionary geneticist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Researchers have suggested before that the primates' pheromonal abilities may have fallen by the wayside because they developed colour vision, a better way of selecting mates. "But we establish the timing for when the pheromone signal transduction pathway was shut off," Zhang told New Scientist

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