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Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study - Health - Nairaland

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Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by nlfpmod: 4:22pm On Dec 23, 2023
A fascinating study has found that sniffing female tears significantly reduced male aggression and decreased activity in aggression-related brain networks. It’s suggested that the effect, which is caused by chemical signals in tears and is also seen in rodents, serves a protective function.

Charles Darwin was perplexed by emotional tears; he thought they served no useful purpose other than lubricating the eye. Although shedding emotional tears is thought to be a solely human trait, since Darwin, researchers have found that mammalian tears contain chemicals that act as social signals, one of which is to reduce aggression.

For example, the tears of female mice contain signals that turn off intermale aggression by curbing activity in the males’ aggression brain networks. And, subordinate male blind mole rats cover themselves in tears to reduce dominant male aggression toward them.

Now, researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel have conducted a series of experiments to investigate whether, like in rodents, sniffing human female tears reduces aggression in men and what functional effect it has on their brains.

“We knew that sniffing tears lowers testosterone and that lowering testosterone has a greater effect on aggression in men than in women, so we began by studying the impact of tears on men because this gave us higher chances of seeing an effect,” said Shani Agron, the lead and co-corresponding author of the study.

There’s limited evidence of human tear chemosignaling, but a previous study by some of the researchers involved in the current study found that women’s tears contain an odorless chemical signal that, when sniffed by males, reduced self-rated sexual arousal, physiological measures of arousal, and testosterone levels.

First, the researchers tested whether sniffing female tears reduced aggression in men. ‘Emotional’ tears were collected from six human donors aged 22 to 25 who watched sad film clips in isolation to induce crying. Twenty-five men were asked to play a two-person monetary game with an opponent they were told was human but was, in fact, a computer algorithm. The game was designed to elicit an aggressive response by the male toward their opponent, whom they were led to believe was cheating. When given the opportunity, the male could get revenge on their opponent by causing them to lose money with no personal gain to them.

Before playing the game, the participants sniffed either female tears or a saline solution – both are odorless – but were not told what they were sniffing. The researchers observed a 43.7% reduction in aggression following exposure to tears. To evaluate the robustness of their results, they ran a bootstrap analysis, a statistical procedure that resamples a single data set to create many simulated samples. The analysis found that the probability of obtaining this outcome by chance was 2.9%, suggesting that, like in rodents, chemosignals in human emotional tears have a primary aggression-blocking function.

Next, the researchers analyzed the effect of sniffing tears on the participants’ brains. After exposure to tears or saline, 26 male participants played the monetary game while undergoing a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan. In two brain structures implicated in aggression – the left anterior insula cortex (AIC) and bilateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) – the researchers noted reduced activity following exposure to tears. There was a significant correlation between the experimental condition (tears versus saline) and activity in these regions.

Investigating the brain’s functional connectivity, they found that tears only impacted the left AIC, which displayed significantly increased connectivity with the right amygdala and piriform cortex. As well as sharing structural connectivity, these regions are part of a functional network implicated in olfaction (smelling) and aggression.

We’ve shown that tears activate olfactory receptors and that they alter aggression-related brain circuits, significantly reducing aggressive behavior,” said Noam Sobel, another of the study’s corresponding authors. “These findings suggest that tears are a chemical blanket, offering protection against aggression – and that this effect is common to rodents and humans, and perhaps to other mammals as well.”

Indeed, a 2022 study found that dogs’ tear volume increased significantly when they were reunited with their owner but not with a familiar non-owner, suggesting they could cry emotional – happy – tears. However, further research is needed to determine whether these tears contain chemosignals that can be picked up by other dogs or by humans.

Having confirmed the effect of sniffing tears on men’s behavior, the researchers are keen to expand their research.

“When we looked for volunteers who could donate tears, we found mostly women because, for them, it’s much more socially acceptable to cry,” Agron said. “Now, however, we must extend this research to include women to obtain a fuller picture of this impact.”

https://newatlas.com/science/chemosignals-womens-tears-reduces-male-aggression-decreases-brain-activity/

2 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by AqualinaXYZ: 4:24pm On Dec 23, 2023
As I read “sniffing” I think say them dey talk about Tinubu and his nose work




Una don graduate from sniffing pants armpits to tears




How do one even sniff tears that doesn’t have odor or smell

78 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Odetokun3(m): 4:26pm On Dec 23, 2023
What should I do with this info?

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by AqualinaXYZ: 4:27pm On Dec 23, 2023
ukaface:
Wouldn’t it be weird if I’m crying and a guy is bringing his nose to sniff my tears? E for kuku lick the tears make aggression reduce by 100% o



Your tears go bitter to lick



Because those tears came from pain of a woman wey no see money buy Christmas wig

32 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by PlutoChief: 4:27pm On Dec 23, 2023
Haaaaaa!
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by UrgentNeeds(m): 4:27pm On Dec 23, 2023
Cry Me A River,

Cry Me A Lagoon...
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by nony43(m): 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
Iberibe ism.
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by olaiya2007(m): 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
smiley
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by talk2hb1(m): 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
Another Bangar!

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by GreatAchiever1: 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
Which kind research be dis?
Research will bring all manner of lies to reduce the aggression in males so that they can further emasculate the man. Like the saying goes, If you want to destroy a society, take away the man, and what is the best way to take him out if not to feminize and weaken him. Remember they said aggression and not abuse and aggression in of itself is not a bad thing, it is part of what make up a man, forget what society has coin it as "toxic masculinity".

7 Likes

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Natbrowny: 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
BULLSHIT

4 Likes

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Anny69: 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
angry What a weird research.

4 Likes

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Dubetex96(m): 4:28pm On Dec 23, 2023
AqualinaXYZ:
As I read sniffing I think say them dey talk about Tinubu




Una don graduate from sniffing pants armpits to tears




How do one even sniff tears that doesn’t have odor or smell


Omoh this article tire me like Thiefinubu mandate

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Brave9ja: 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
lies
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by sunshineV(f): 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
so who is the creep that came up with this research?

3 Likes

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Nemesis4you: 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
Anything goes in the name of research grin
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by fanwas(m): 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
Some study get as it be, the other time it was smelling fart reduce the rate of getting cancer
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Checkwell: 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
Hmmmm. It is finished. Kpata kpata!
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Okiton: 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
cheesy

And again scientists don discover something new

Sniffing women tears reduce men aggression to 44%, if him drink am nko?

3 Likes

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by illuminutty: 4:29pm On Dec 23, 2023
This may likely increase domestic violence against women as more men try to beat out tears out of women to experience this.

The result of certain research should just be confined to the Recycle ♻️ Bin.

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Dubetex96(m): 4:30pm On Dec 23, 2023
Na pant we want to dey sniff not tears how is that even romantic
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Geatfaae: 4:30pm On Dec 23, 2023
Ok
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Totilopussylick(m): 4:30pm On Dec 23, 2023
According to them.


Them said na new study.


You can try it if it been long you did it last tongue
AqualinaXYZ:
As I read sniffing I think say them dey talk about Tinubu




Una don graduate from sniffing pants armpits to tears




How do one even sniff tears that doesn’t have odor or smell
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by marlow1962(m): 4:31pm On Dec 23, 2023
Stupid study
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by ukaface(f): 4:32pm On Dec 23, 2023
Wouldn’t it be weird if I’m crying and a guy is bringing his nose to sniff my tears? E for kuku lick the tears make aggression reduce by 100% o

4 Likes

Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Houseontherock1: 4:32pm On Dec 23, 2023
It'll be weird to see men moving close to teary eyed women to sniff tears instead of consoling undecided
Re: Sniffing Women’s Tears Reduces Male Aggression By 44% - New Study by Godfullsam(m): 4:32pm On Dec 23, 2023
Nonsense and ingredients

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