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The Smell Of Death Has A Strange Influence On Human Behavior

Did you know that flies can smell a body from miles away and even dig down as far as 2 meters (6.5 feet) to wriggle into a coffin and lay their eggs? They’re lured in by chemical signals, but it seems it’s not just scavengers that can detect the smell of death. Research has uncovered how a compound released by corpses can have a surprising influence on human behavior, even when we don’t realize we’re smelling it.

When we die, our bodies release something called putrescine, which is responsible for the horrendous smell that comes from rotting meat – human or otherwise. A 2015 study set out to investigate if it could constitute a threat signal that brings about defensive and escape-related behaviors in humans.

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It did this in four ways:

The study found that exposure to putrescine resulted in heightened vigilance among participants, even when they weren’t aware they were smelling it. Participants in the putrescine condition also seemed to walk faster in the escape experiments, and exhibited more hostility and defensive behaviors than those in the other conditions. It could be that this is a helpful adaptation to a chemical signal in triggering the kinds of fight or flight behaviors that might just keep us alive in a dangerous situation, though questions remain as to what threat putrescine is warning us of.

“As a whole, the findings indicate that even brief exposure to putrescine mobilizes threat management responses designed to cope with environmental threats,” concluded the authors. “These are the first results to show that a specific chemical compound (putrescine) can be processed as a threat signal.”

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“An important direction for future research will be to understand the precise nature of the threat produced by putrescine (e.g., microbial, predatory). Our view is that putrescine is relevant to both of these domains, though the immediate context should determine which type of threat is more primary.”

So, if the smell of rotting meat gets your back up, you’re not alone.

The study is published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.

Source Link: The Smell Of Death Has A Strange Influence On Human Behavior

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