The Post

Hearts race and skin tingles whenever fertile women speak

- PATRICK SAWER

FROM Lauren Bacall’s killer line "You know how to whistle don’t you?" in the 1944 classic To Have and Have Not, to broadcaste­r Mariella Frostrup’s honey-ongravel huskiness, women’s voices have renowned powers of seduction.

Now scientists have establishe­d that a man’s skin really does tingle when he hears a woman speak.

Scientists believe hormonal changes at the fertile time of the monthly cycle may have a physiologi­cal effect on the woman’s larynx to which listeners react unconsciou­sly.

American researcher­s have found that electrical activity in a man’s skin increases, along with his heart rate, within five seconds of hearing the voice of a female at her most fertile.

And that, they say, suggests that the speed of the nervous system’s reaction means he is attracted by the voice before he is consciousl­y aware of what is happening.

The study gives a new perspectiv­e on the Spike Jonze film Her, in which a man falls in love with an intelligen­t computer operating system personifie­d by a faceless female voice, a role performed by Scarlett Johansson.

Dr Melanie Shoup-Knox of James Madison University in America, who carried out the study with Dr Nate Pipitone of Adams State University, said: "A man’s ability to identify and respond to a fertile woman confers him a potential reproducti­ve advantage when choosing between potential mates. Women, on the other hand, may get a competitiv­e advantage from detecting the fertility status of other females.’’

Digital recordings of women speaking at fertile and non-fertile times of the menstrual cycle were played to males and females, who were then asked to rate them for attractive­ness.

A report on the research in Physiology and Behaviour showed that both men and women rated the fertile voices as the more attractive. The electrical activity in the skin of both men and women increased by about 20 per cent when listening to the fertile women’s voices, and heart rates increased by about five per cent.

 ?? Photos: GETTY IMAGES ?? Lauren Bacall’s voice seduced Humphrey Bogart in the 1940s while British broadcaste­r Mariella Frostrup’s has a similar effect on a more recent generation of males. Now scientists have a better idea of what’s involved.
Photos: GETTY IMAGES Lauren Bacall’s voice seduced Humphrey Bogart in the 1940s while British broadcaste­r Mariella Frostrup’s has a similar effect on a more recent generation of males. Now scientists have a better idea of what’s involved.
 ??  ?? Sexy voices:
Sexy voices:

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