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Dive into the research topics where Elisabeth Oberzaucher is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisabeth Oberzaucher.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2007

Individual and gender fingerprints in human body odour

Dustin J. Penn; Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer; Gottfried Fischer; Helena A. Soini; Donald Wiesler; Milos V. Novotny; Sarah J. Dixon; Yun Xu; Richard G. Brereton

Individuals are thought to have their own distinctive scent, analogous to a signature or fingerprint. To test this idea, we collected axillary sweat, urine and saliva from 197 adults from a village in the Austrian Alps, taking five sweat samples per subject over 10 weeks using a novel skin sampling device. We analysed samples using stir bar sorptive extraction in connection with thermal desorption gas chromatograph–mass spectrometry (GC–MS), and then we statistically analysed the chromatographic profiles using pattern recognition techniques. We found more volatile compounds in axillary sweat than in urine or saliva, and among these we found 373 peaks that were consistent over time (detected in four out of five samples per individual). Among these candidate compounds, we found individually distinct and reproducible GC–MS fingerprints, a reproducible difference between the sexes, and we identified the chemical structures of 44 individual and 12 gender-specific volatile compounds. These individual compounds provide candidates for major histocompatibility complex and other genetically determined odours. This is the first study on human axillary odour to sample a large number of subjects, and our findings are relevant to understanding the chemical nature of human odour, and efforts to design electronic sensors (e-nose) for biometric fingerprinting and disease diagnoses.


Human Nature | 2008

Face to Face : The Perception of Automotive Designs.

Sonja Windhager; Dennis E. Slice; Katrin Schaefer; Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Truls Thorstensen; Karl Grammer

Over evolutionary time, humans have developed a selective sensitivity to features in the human face that convey information on sex, age, emotions, and intentions. This ability might not only be applied to our conspecifics nowadays, but also to other living objects (i.e., animals) and even to artificial structures, such as cars. To investigate this possibility, we asked people to report the characteristics, emotions, personality traits, and attitudes they attribute to car fronts, and we used geometric morphometrics (GM) and multivariate statistical methods to determine and visualize the corresponding shape information. Automotive features and proportions are found to covary with trait perception in a manner similar to that found with human faces. Emerging analogies are discussed. This study should have implications for both our understanding of our prehistoric psyche and its interrelation with the modern world.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 2010

Analysis of Volatile Organic Compounds in Human Saliva by a Static Sorptive Extraction Method and Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry

Helena A. Soini; Iveta Klouckova; Donald Wiesler; Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer; Sarah J. Dixon; Yun Xu; Richard G. Brereton; Dustin J. Penn; Milos V. Novotny

Human saliva not only helps control oral health (with anti-microbial proteins), but it may also play a role in chemical communication. As is the case with other mammalian species, human saliva contains peptides, proteins, and numerous volatile organic compounds (VOCs). A high-throughput analytical method is described for profiling a large number of saliva samples to screen the profiles of VOCs. Saliva samples were collected in a non-stimulated fashion. The method utilized static stir bar extraction followed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The method provided excellent reproducibility for a wide range of salivary compounds, including alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, amines, amides, lactones, and hydrocarbons. Furthermore, substantial overlap of salivary VOCs and the previously reported skin VOCs in the same subject group was found in this study by using pattern recognition analyses. Sensitivity, precision, and reproducibility of the method suggest that this technique has potential in physiological, metabolomic, pharmacokinetic, forensic, and toxicological studies of small organic compounds where a large number of human saliva samples are involved.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Psychology of Fragrance Use: Perception of Individual Odor and Perfume Blends Reveals a Mechanism for Idiosyncratic Effects on Fragrance Choice

Pavlina Lenochova; Pavla Vohnoutová; S. Craig Roberts; Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer; Jan Havlíček

Cross-culturally, fragrances are used to modulate body odor, but the psychology of fragrance choice has been largely overlooked. The prevalent view is that fragrances mask an individuals body odor and improve its pleasantness. In two experiments, we found positive effects of perfume on body odor perception. Importantly, however, this was modulated by significant interactions with individual odor donors. Fragrances thus appear to interact with body odor, creating an individually-specific odor mixture. In a third experiment, the odor mixture of an individuals body odor and their preferred perfume was perceived as more pleasant than a blend of the same body odor with a randomly-allocated perfume, even when there was no difference in pleasantness between the perfumes. This indicates that fragrance use extends beyond simple masking effects and that people choose perfumes that interact well with their own odor. Our results provide an explanation for the highly individual nature of perfume choice.


Metabolomics | 2007

Comparison of human axillary odour profiles obtained by gas chromatography mass spectrometry and skin microbial profiles obtained by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis using multivariate pattern recognition

Yun Xu; Sarah J. Dixon; Richard G. Brereton; Helena A. Soini; Milos V. Novotny; Karlheinz Trebesius; Ingrid Bergmaier; Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer; Dustin J. Penn

Several studies have shown that microbial action is responsible for many compounds responsible for human odour. In this paper, we compare the pattern of microbial profiles and that of chemical profiles of human axillary odour by using multivariate pattern matching techniques. Approximately 200 subjects from Carinthia, Austria, participated in the study. The microbial profiles were represented by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis and the axillary odour profiles were determined in the sweat samples collected by a stir-bar sampling device and analysed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Both qualitative and quantitative distance metrics were used to construct dissimilarity matrices between samples which were then used to represent the patterns of these two types of profiles. The distance matrices were then compared by using the Mantel test and the Procrustean test. The results show that on the overall dataset there is no strong correlation between microbial and chemical profiles. When the data are split into family groups, correlations vary according to family with a range of estimated p values from 0.00 to 0.90 that the null hypothesis (no correlation) holds. When 32 subjects who followed four basic rules of behaviour were selected, the estimated p-values are 0.00 using qualitative and <0.01 using quantitative distance metrics, suggesting excellent evidence that there is a connection between the microbial and chemical signature.


language resources and evaluation | 2007

The analysis of embodied communicative feedback in multimodal corpora: a prerequisite for behavior simulation

Jens Allwood; Stefan Kopp; Karl Grammer; Elisabeth Ahlsén; Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Markus Koppensteiner

Communicative feedback refers to unobtrusive (usually short) vocal or bodily expressions whereby a recipient of information can inform a contributor of information about whether he/she is able and willing to communicate, perceive the information, and understand the information. This paper provides a theory for embodied communicative feedback, describing the different dimensions and features involved. It also provides a corpus analysis part, describing a first data coding and analysis method geared to find the features postulated by the theory. The corpus analysis part describes different methods and statistical procedures and discusses their applicability and the possible insights gained with these methods.


Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology | 2017

Preferred Interpersonal Distances: A Global Comparison

Agnieszka Sorokowska; Piotr Sorokowski; Peter Hilpert; Katarzyna Cantarero; Tomasz Frackowiak; Khodabakhsh Ahmadi; Ahmad M. Alghraibeh; Richmond Aryeetey; Anna Marta Maria Bertoni; Karim Bettache; Sheyla Blumen; Marta Błażejewska; Tiago Bortolini; Marina Butovskaya; Felipe Nalon Castro; Hakan Cetinkaya; Diana Cunha; Daniel David; Oana A. David; Fahd A. Dileym; Alejandra Domínguez Espinosa; Silvia Donato; Daria Dronova; Seda Dural; Jitka Fialová; Maryanne L. Fisher; Evrim Gulbetekin; Aslıhan Hamamcıoğlu Akkaya; Ivana Hromatko; Raffaella Iafrate

Human spatial behavior has been the focus of hundreds of previous research studies. However, the conclusions and generalizability of previous studies on interpersonal distance preferences were limited by some important methodological and sampling issues. The objective of the present study was to compare preferred interpersonal distances across the world and to overcome the problems observed in previous studies. We present an extensive analysis of interpersonal distances over a large data set (N = 8,943 participants from 42 countries). We attempted to relate the preferred social, personal, and intimate distances observed in each country to a set of individual characteristics of the participants, and some attributes of their cultures. Our study indicates that individual characteristics (age and gender) influence interpersonal space preferences and that some variation in results can be explained by temperature in a given region. We also present objective values of preferred interpersonal distances in different regions, which might be used as a reference data point in future studies.


PLOS ONE | 2014

The case of Moulay Ismael--fact or fancy?

Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer

Textbooks on evolutionary psychology and biology cite the case of the Sharifian Emperor of Morocco, Moulay Ismael the Bloodthirsty (1672–1727) who was supposed to have sired 888 children. This example for male reproduction has been challenged and led to a still unresolved discussion. The scientific debate is shaped by assumptions about reproductive constraints which cannot be tested directly—and the figures used are sometimes arbitrary. Therefore we developed a computer simulation which tests how many copulations per day were necessary to reach the reported reproductive outcome. We based our calculations on a report dating 1704, thus computing whether it was possible to have 600 sons in a reproductive timespan of 32 years. The algorithm is based on three different models of conception and different social and biological constraints. In the first model we used a random mating pool with unrestricted access to females. In the second model we used a restricted harem pool. The results indicate that Moulay Ismael could have achieved this high reproductive success. A comparison of the three conception models highlights the necessity to consider female sexual habits when assessing fertility across the cycle. We also show that the harem size needed is far smaller than the reported numbers.


Gerontology | 2010

Immune Reactivity and Attractiveness

Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer

Over the past decades, information about the characteristics of attractiveness has accumulated. We know about eight pillars of beauty, among them youthfulness, symmetry, hormone markers and body odor. But what is the biological function of these attractive signals? Is there one common function to be found in all eight beauty markers? In this paper, we argue that attractiveness signals immune resistance. Being attractive would thus be an honest signal for an immune system that coped well with the environmental challenges it was exposed to during ontogeny. This is a prerequisite for developmental stability, which again affects the differentiation of beauty characteristics. We argue that human preferences and mate choice criteria have evolved in coevolution with parasites, and that the current parasite load modulates our decision making.


Gerontology | 2009

Ageing, Mate Preferences and Sexuality: A Mini-Review

Elisabeth Oberzaucher; Karl Grammer

The evolutionary constraints that lead to the evolution of sexual reproduction are framed by the better repair mechanisms that repair fatal mutations, as well as the need for variable immune systems imposed on large organisms by parasites, such as viruses and bacteria. Besides the evolution of sexual reproduction, these factors also affect mate choice, especially as regards the gene complex that encodes the immune system. The need to increase both the likelihood of gametes to encounter each other as well as sufficient provision of nutrition for the offspring then leads to the evolution of two sexes: large numbers of small mobile sperms ensure that gametes meet, whereas large egg cells full of energy provide for the zygote, thus leading to a developmental advantage. The asymmetric investment in the offspring then affects not only mate choice criteria, but also cognitive strategies. Men place more importance on youthfulness and fertility than women, who regard resource holding potential as a more relevant criterion. Consequently, female jealousy is connected to endangered access to resources, whereas male jealousy is rooted in paternal uncertainty. Cognitive adaptations developed to ensure reproductive success show sex differences, such as in error management. The most obvious function of sexual behavior is reproduction. To foster the benefits for the offspring, reproduction partners should also develop an emotional bond, which is mediated by hormones connected to sexual intercourse. With increasing age, reproduction loses importance, while pair bonding functions remain relevant. Therefore, sexuality never ceases to be part of a relationship.

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Dustin J. Penn

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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Yun Xu

University of Bristol

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Milos V. Novotny

Indiana University Bloomington

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