Emma Eliasson, postdoctoral researcher at the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ centre for suicide research and prevention (NASP), is featured in Springer Nature Communities to discuss POTION – Promoting Social Interaction through Emotional Body Odours – a research project that aims to explore whether chemosignals, that can be found in human sweat, in combination with a mindfulness treatment, can lower social anxiety.
explores how chemosignals, extracted from human sweat, can impact people’s well-being and reduce social anxiety. By integrating these into treatment, researchers aim to create a new method that integrates research on perceptual neuroscience and olfaction to strengthen existing therapies for social anxiety. The results may contribute to developing new strategies for managing social anxiety and improving the quality of life for those affected by this condition.
In Springer Nature Communities, , postdoc at NASP, talks about the POTION project’s potential to strengthen future treatment methods for social anxiety, and describes the last of a series of clinical studies conducted by POTION, where synthetically produced chemosignals are tested for anxiety reducing purposes.