In a departure from my usual posts, I can finally talk about my dissertation. Finally. I didn't like that in my last few posts I had to be so cryptic about what I was up to. That was partly due to the fact that some people who read my blog I needed as participants but mainly because I knew I wanted to devote a whole post to the project. I'm going to try to make a considered effort not to focus on how quickly the past six months have flown by and instead explain what I've been doing that has caused me to neglect this blog so terribly!

Everyone writes a thesis at the end of their degree but psychologists are asked to run our own experiment. Our thesis takes the form of a lab report on steroids. I was lucky enough to be given my first choice which fell under the realm of evolutionary psychology and linked two theories around human sense of smell.

Getting a little technical now, the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a genetic marker that helps with immune response. It comes in many different types and varies from person to person - this variation is advertised in body odour. If you're looking to have strong and healthy children, it makes sense to choose a mate who has different MHC genes than yourself, because your kids will be more likely to fight off a greater range of diseases. This is called disassortative mating. Unusually, the preference for a partner with opposite MHC genes is switched when a woman takes hormonal contraception like the pill.

There's another theory that states that the fragrances we like are related to the MHC. We like particular fragrances because they reflect and help advertise the MHC cues in our body odour to other people (i.e. potential mates). The idea behind my study was to find evidence for a link between these two theories.


I had couples in heterosexual relationships come to the lab (extremely high tech, as you can see) to fill out some questionnaires and then smell some smells! Participants completed some forms, a smell identification test, and then went on to smell some accords, which are ingredients that make up perfumes. Participants rated them out of 10 and ranked them in order of how much they'd like to wear them and how much they'd like their partner to wear them. I then compared their results with their partners and also looked at overall trends across gender and contraceptive choice.

7, 957 words, 72 references, 47 pages, and 155 days later, I submitted my findings!


As you might suspect, hardly anything was significant. I didn't find a strong correlation between couples preferring the opposite fragrances if they were using non-hormonal contraception, nor did I find a strong correlation between couples preferring the same fragrances if they were using hormonal contraception. Disappointing but not unexpected. It made for a lengthy discussion about why my findings don't support the current literature, which is always a good thing in science.

I did however find a significant difference in ratings for the vanilla-scented accord. Women not using hormonal contraception prefered the smell by far compared to both women on hormonal contraception and men. It's a completely novel finding and there's been very little research into vanilla so at least I've got that going for me! Not 100% sure what will be done with it or its significance for wider research but at least I discovered something new!

The main thing, however, is that my dissertation is over and done with! Contrary to popular belief, I did actually enjoy writing my dissertation and I can put that down to two things: the topic and lots of planning. Firstly, I have always had an interest in evolutionary psychology and contraception effects so the past semester and a bit were far more tolerable than if I had been researching into something like cognition. Secondly, I cannot stress the importance of organisation enough. You're far more likely to stay sane when you've planned to write your 8000 words leisurely over the course of a few weeks as opposed to everything in one caffeine-fueled weekend of pain and suffering. I owe a lot to the Bullet Journal system for keeping my life together too (even if it has continued to enable my obsession with stationery).

If you've made it to the end of this post, thank you! I know it's a total departure from my usual posts and I promise to get back to posting about my misadventuring soon! I'll wrap up this unreasonable wall of text with the same quote I used in my acknowledgements:

“A flower’s fragrance declares to all the world that it is fertile, available, and desirable. Its smell reminds us in vestigial ways of fertility, vigour, life force, all the optimism, expectancy, and passionate bloom of youth. We inhale its ardent aroma and, no matter what our ages, we feel young and nubile in a world aflame with desire.”
– Diane Ackerman, A Natural History of the Senses
It feels like just last week that I was writing my 2014 post but somehow I've blinked and another year has flown by!

1 - Perthshire/Trossachs and Sea Lochs Road Trip
2 - Edinburgh Zoo 
3 - St Andrews
4 - The Wizarding World of Harry Potter
5 - Kennedy Space Center
6 - Dolphin Research Center
7 - Harry Potter Studio Tour
8 - British Wildlife Centre
9 - Bridge of Allan Fireworks
10 - Winter
2015 had ups and downs like every year but I think I can say on the whole that it was very, very good to me. I returned from an incredible semester studying abroad to lots of lovely friends and family, took an impromptu road trip around the heart of Scotland, visited Edinburgh Zoo (twice), saw a solar eclipse, surprised my brothervisited the ancient ruins of St Andrews Cathedral, took a trip to Hogwarts (twice), walked around a rocket garden, melted on a very famous beach, found a turtle nest, achieved my childhood dream and got peed on by a gecko in the same day, dressed up for a day at the races, proved I haven't grown up at all by visiting an animal centre for my 21st birthday, became vegetarian, began work on my dissertation, started practising yoga, experienced VR for the first time in my life, celebrated my grandad's 90th birthday, got some arty fireworks shots, had a wonderful flat Christmas, and last but not least, celebrated my grandma's 90th birthday!

While I'm not one to make firm all-or-nothing resolutions, I have several daily journals I plan on keeping in 2016. I also want to get more into yoga and meditation this year and to find a job I enjoy after I graduate (with what will hopefully be a respectable degree classification!). Above all, I want to travel! There's still so much of the world to see and so little time to see it!

I hope 2016 is good to you too! May your health be good, your heart happy, and your travel adventurous!
Winter this year has been rather unpredictable. There were murmurs of the worst snows in decades during autumn which actually turned out to be a whole siege of rainstorms. While Stirling wasn't too badly affected compared to other areas of the UK, we did have some floods in town and winds that got dangerously high on campus. I was very nearly blown off the bridge during Storm Abigail.

Weather side, this semester saw my very last exam of my degree! Fourth year psychology students aren't supposed to have any exams but I'm on the deviant programme which means I had to drop back into third year to complete a course I couldn't do in Canada (I'm not a student delinquent, I promise). To honour the biannual tradition one last time, revision appropriately descended into insanity, but this time in the form of writing incredibly well-received cat-related practice questions for the entire course (I wasn't joking about the insanity). This largely coincided with my addiction to the app Neko Atsume for which I refuse to apologise. It's too cute.


Over the course of December, our flat decorated the kitchen and corridors with paper chains, snowflakes and wreaths all in time for our magnificent Christmas dinner. It was probably one of the finest dinners I've had (no offense, mum!) and was entirely down to my good friend Ayumi, whom I'm trying to convince to start a food blog. Everything was homemade, from the salmon en croute to the two types of stuffing, right down to the pesto for the crostini starters! 


Four starters, three different mains, heaps of potatoes and vegetables, and two desserts all on a student budget! Afterwards, we swapped presents for our Secret Santa, played a round of White Elephant and far too many horrifying rounds of Cards Against Humanity. 


Then it was off home for Christmas, this time by train. I had a time of it getting to Edinburgh Waverley thanks to an assortment of different delays at every change I had to make, but I eventually stumbled out of Kings Cross after having snapped some shots of the River Tyne when we stopped at Newcastle. 


Mum treated me to a trip to the National Theatre to see Jane Eyre not long after I got back. It was my first time at the NT and I wasn't disappointed! The performance was very impressive and featured a band centre-stage surrounded by a very minimalistic wooden set.

The walk back to the tube afterwards along Embankment was unintentionally torturous, providing me with a fantastic reason to stay in London after graduation. Not only do I have no idea what to do with myself once I have my degree but I have no idea where to be either. 


...Not letting myself dwell on that for long, I was on the road again to go to Manchester. It was my first time in the city and I was struck by how similar it is to London. They're both big, old, industrial cities and it's easy to see the history in all the buildings, though Manchester seems to enjoy tearing them down and building new ones. 


Giant Santa made of fairy lights notwithstanding, the town hall reminded me a lot of London's Natural History Museum and the Gay Village overlooked the canals, which reminded me of the Grand Union Canal


We were only there for two nights and unfortunately a lot of what we wanted to do was shut because it was Christmas Eve. I'm pretty disappointed we couldn't make it inside the John Rylands Library but I suppose it's an excuse to come back one day! That said, we did manage a bit of sightseeing, including a wander around Affleck's (Manchester's equivalent to Camden Market) and peek into the Royal Exchange Theatre which had this incredible stained glass roof. The theatre itself sits in the middle of the hall forming an arena and looks very futuristic


We also managed to get a table at at a gorgeous vegetarian restaurant called 1847 (so named because the Vegetarian Society was founded in that year) and I'm still dreaming about those onion bhajis...

Anyway! On Christmas Day, we drove to Warrington for Grandma's 90th birthday and Christmas dinner (in that order). It was a busy two days with a lot of food, family and festivities which got the better of Grandad as you can see... 


You'd think they'd have a quiet life at 90 but my grandparents were just recently interviewed for Radio 4's You and Yours! I don't know how long it will be available, but for now you can listen to them talking about their frankly palatial retirement home at the timestamp 30:45.

I had a nice and quiet New Years Eve (just the way I like it!) hanging out with Kiran's house bunny and celebrated the following day with a roast with our neighbours. We have a tradition of having a massive roast dinner as two families when we're all in London for Christmas and we managed to squeeze one in for New Years just in time. It was lovely with a lot of wonderful food but after my third roast dinner in a month, I'm confident I'll be heading back to uni the size of a house.