Men's Attraction To Luxury Brands Involves Testosterone: Study

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
luxury brands of cars, watches, pens, or clothes which, like stag anglers and peacock tails, signal "status" to the female gender,
scientists said Tuesday.The sex hormone, it turns out, is a major influencer of male consumer behaviour, according to a study published in
the journal Nature Communications."This is likely because testosterone plays a role in behaviours that relate to social rank (in animals),
and owning status products is a strategy to signal one's rank within human social hierarchies," study co-author Gideon Nave of the
University of Pennsylvania told AFP.Studies have already established that humans use consumer goods to exhibit social status
But the role of hormones was unknown.Nave and a team recruited 243 men aged 18 to 55 for a trial
Some were given a dose of testosterone, applied to the skin in gel form, while others received a placebo or "dummy" dose.They were then
asked to choose between two products -- of similar quality but one boasting a trademark considered high status -- a judgement determined in
a previous survey of over 600 men."We found that the men who received testosterone showed greater preference towards the high status
brands," said Nave.The effect, he added, "is akin to behaviour of non-human animals, where testosterone typically rises during the breeding
season and promotes the display of traits that signal the organism's fitness to potential competitors and mates," he added.Do the findings
imply that women have a preference for men who drive a Ferrari or wear a Rolex"The use of brands to signal status does not necessarily have
to 'work', it's enough that the men believe that it works," said Nave.The team noted that the products associated with status would differ
between cultures.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated
feed.)