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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsStudy: Antibiotics May Prevent Men From Overtrusting Attractive Women
From the annals of WTF?
"Japanese researchers believe they've found an antidote for men's susceptibility to femme fatales.
PROBLEM: Here are the stakes, according to a team of Japanese researchers: "In movies, a female spy often wins the trust of her male target using her physical attractiveness. The male target usually suspects that she is a spy, but because of her attractiveness, he becomes amorously entangled with the female spy despite concerns regarding her trustworthiness." It's called the "honey trap." That's funny because it's like, objectifying, but it's also a play on words if you're into trapping bears or bees. Anyway, it apparently happens in the real world, too.
METHODOLOGY: A group of 98 healthy young Japanese men (aged 20 to 30) were randomly assigned either a placebo or 200 milligrams of the antibiotic minocycline, which in the past has been shown to have a "sobering" effect -- one study showed that it lessens the high of people who are on amphetamines.
After four days on the antibiotic, the men played a game designed to determine how much they trusted their partner, one of eight young women whose photographs they were provided with. Starting with an initial purse of 1300 yen, they were told that the more money they offered their partner, they more they stood to potentially earn. However, the female partner could choose to betray them, taking all of the earnings and leaving the man with nothing. The game was rigged -- all of the women were planning on deceiving the men from the outset." [As we always do ]
"RESULTS: The men who had taken a placebo gave significantly more money to the women they perceived as attractive; the men who had been given minocycline did not. The women's attractiveness, for the latter group, did not influence how wiling they were to trust them."
There is even a chart, so it must be true.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/05/study-antibiotics-may-prevent-men-from-overtrusting-attractive-women/275525/
Xipe Totec
(43,888 posts)BainsBane
(53,012 posts)ForgoTheConsequence
(4,867 posts)= (
HereSince1628
(36,063 posts)no minocycline needed here.
The Coasters?
HereSince1628
(36,063 posts)BainsBane
(53,012 posts)I hope you're SO doesn't see this post.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)BainsBane
(53,012 posts)Beautiful women are evil temptresses. We need to find a way to inoculate ourselves against them. We need a pharmacological trial, funded by a government agency. A review committee then approved the funding, a journal published it, and now The Atlantic publishes it uncritically.
redqueen
(115,101 posts)desperately sad... that's better.
It is desperately sad.
Arkana
(24,347 posts)to determine that guys who think with their dongles make poor decisions?
BainsBane
(53,012 posts)They used antibiotics to cure dongle thinking.
Xipe Totec
(43,888 posts)hunter
(38,301 posts)Libido gone, and I didn't even miss it... a side effect only 13% of patients experience.
Unlucky, because other than that it wasn't the worst med I've taken and it worked pretty well.
BainsBane
(53,012 posts)But no doubt they'll be looking for some brain receptors with this one... for good or evil.
Imagine a drug like this that had the opposite effect -- a drug that increases a man's trust of attractive women.