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Humans proven to be able to smell emotions
A smelly experiment proves that humans can smell fear and disgust on each other, and that the smell triggers the same feelings in them too.
Wed, Nov 07 2012 at 1:06 PM
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Humans can smell fear and disgust, and the emotions are contagious, according to a new study.
The findings, published Nov. 5 in the journal Psychological Science, suggest that humans communicate via smell just like other animals.
"These findings are contrary to the commonly accepted assumption that human communication runs exclusively via language or visual channels," write Gün Semin and colleagues from Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
Most animals communicate using smell, but because humans lack the same odor-sensing organs, scientists thought we had long ago lost our ability to smell fear or other emotions.
To find out, the team collected sweat from under the armpits of 10 men while they watched either frightening scenes from the horror movie "The Shining" or repulsive clips of MTV's "Jackass."
Next, the researchers asked 36 women to take a visual test while they unknowingly inhaled the scent of men's sweat. When women sniffed "fear sweat," they opened their eyes wide in a scared expression, while those smelling sweat from disgusted men scrunched their faces into a repulsed grimace. (The team chose men as the sweat donors and women as the receivers because past research suggests women are more sensitive to men's scent than vice versa.)
The findings suggest that humans can communicate at least some emotions by smell, which could prove useful in crowded places, the authors suggest.
"Our research suggests that emotional chemo-signals can be potential contributors to emotional contagion in situations involving dense crowds," the authors write in the study.
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This story was originally written for LiveScience and is reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.
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