Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

Submission Preview

Link to Story

the Chemicals We Off-gas Change When We Watch Something Funny Or Thrilling

Accepted submission by Phoenix666 at 2016-05-12 13:17:21
Science

In cartoon worlds, squiggly lines over characters are reserved for the exceptionally smelly. But, in reality, everyone deserves those little squiggles: each of us is constantly emitting a steady stream of gases and microbes, as well as smells. And those gases may be able to reveal more about us than what we last ate (and whether it agreed with us). Our gases may also divulge what we think about movies. [arstechnica.com]

In a study involving 9,500 moviegoers, researchers found that the chemicals that audience members off-gas [doi.org] while viewing a film reproducibly vary depending on the type of scene they’re watching. Specifically, the researchers noted synchronized changes in the amounts of specific gases during funny and thrilling bits of movies. The finding, published in the journal Scientific Reports, provides a whiff of evidence that humans may use volatile chemicals as signals. While much more data is needed to support that hypothesis, the authors speculate that audience emissions may be useful for evaluating whether movies are truly funny or thrilling.

For the study, researchers hooked up a proton transfer reaction mass spectrometer (PTR-MS) to the out-going air vents of a theater during 108 showings of 16 different films, including Buddy, The Hobbit, and Carrie. The PRT-MS measured 100 of the 872 volatile chemicals humans are known to emit, with a detection limit of sub-parts per billion.

In the future when they say a movie stinks, they'll mean it literally.


Original Submission