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Nose-pulling: Humans can smell others' emotions | Israel Hayom

2024-01-10T10:16:37.282Z

Highlights: Human body odors reveal our emotions. People can tell if someone is in a good or bad mood by their body odor. Women are particularly sensitive to body odor as they are the only ones who can cry. The more body odor a person has, the more likely it is that they are to be in a relationship with another person, according to a study by the University of California, Los Angeles. For more information on the study, visit: http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/29/science/science-and-technology/index.html#storylink=cpy. For confidential support call the Samaritans on 08457 90 90 90, visit a local Samaritans branch or click here.


An Israeli Weizmann Institute study found that people connect and even fall in love based on body odor. Other studies have found that our body odors reveal all the emotions we try to hide from others


Our emotions are expressed in many ways – and even if you think you can hide them behind your poker face – others can still whisper them... Through smell. More and more research shows that emotions and personality traits are expressed in our body odor, and we are able to detect differences in different body odors. We used Forefront and Claude to sniff out this fascinating scientific area.

The mechanics behind changing body odors remain shrouded in mystery, but research shows that humans are able to interpret body odors, with women exhibiting special sensitivity – probably a biological evolution from being the primary caregivers of babies, who are not yet able to express emotions verbally and therefore their most advanced 'expression' is crying (which also secretes odor through tears) and body odor.

A Chinese study found that the greater a person's perception of smell, the less loneliness and more friends they report. Another study, by the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, investigated the relationship between different people based on similarities between their body odors, and found that both humans and sophisticated electronic noses can predict which people will report immediate "chemistry" by comparing their body odor. Even studies that included smelling clothes previously worn by people in different moods found that the smells were influenced by moods that were "trapped" by the smell of clothes.

Specific molecules, such as anxiety-regulating hexanal, are likely responsible for increasing or decreasing levels of trust between people. Unlike verbal expressions or facial expressions, which we can fake, chemical emissions betray our true mood and emotions.

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Source: israelhayom

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