(Press-News.org) Cats spend longer sniffing the odor of a stranger than that of their owner, suggesting that they can identify familiar humans based on smell alone, according to a study publishing May 28, 2025 in the open-access journal PLOS One by Yutaro Miyairi and colleagues at Tokyo University of Agriculture, Japan.
Cats use their sense of smell to identify other cats and communicate with each other, but whether they can also use smell to distinguish between different humans has not previously been studied. The researchers investigated whether cats are able to distinguish between familiar and unfamiliar humans based on smell alone. They tested thirty domestic cats by presenting them with plastic tubes containing swabs that had been rubbed under the armpit, behind the ear, and between the toes of either their owner or a human they had never met.
The cats spent significantly longer sniffing unknown odors than those of their owner or an empty tube. The researchers also found that cats were initially more likely to sniff unknown odors with their right nostril but later switched to their left nostril as they became more familiar with the smell.
Participating cat owners were also asked to complete an online questionnaire to assess the cat’s personality and their relationship with their owner. Male cats with neurotic personalities tended to sniff each tube repetitively, whereas males with more agreeable personalities sniffed the tubes more calmly. However, there was no effect of personality on the behavior of female cats during the experiment.
The results suggest that domestic cats can discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar humans based on their odor, but it remains unclear whether they can identify specific humans based on smell alone. The finding that cats preferred to investigate new smells with their right nostril suggests that they may favor different hemispheres of their brain for different tasks — a phenomenon that has previously been demonstrated in other animals including dogs, fish and birds.
The authors add: “We suggest that cats use their olfaction for the recognition of humans. Also, we record characteristic rubbing (marking) behavior occurring after sniffing, indicating that sniffing may be an exploratory behavior preceding the rubbing of odor (marking) in cats. This relationship warrants further investigation along with the theory of whether cats are able to recognize a specific person from olfactory cues.”
In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS One: https://plos.io/3SCUGDq
Citation: Miyairi Y, Kimura Y, Masuda K, Uchiyama H (2025) Behavioral responses of domestic cats to human odor. PLoS One 20(5): e0324016. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0324016
Author countries: Japan
Funding: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work.
END
Cats recognize their owner’s scent
Domestic cats respond differently to the odor of their owner than that of an unfamiliar human
2025-05-28
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Own sense of athleticism linked to personality, family, prior experience, and feedback
2025-05-28
In a new study of college undergraduates in Japan, the students’ self-perception of their own athletic ability was linked with several internal and external factors, such as personality traits, family characteristics, leisure activities, and others’ perceptions. Sho Ito of Nanzan University, Japan, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on May 28, 2025.
Self-perception of one’s own athletic ability could influence one’s motivation to engage in physical activity. For young people, the sense of one’s own athleticism may affect their participation in sports and other physical activities, ...
A sweeping study of 7,000 years of monuments in South Arabia
2025-05-28
COLUMBUS, Ohio – New research brings together 7,000 years of history in South Arabia to show how ancient pastoralists changed placement and construction of monuments over time in the face of environmental and cultural forces.
In a study published today (May 28, 2025) in PLOS One, an international team of archaeologists documents how monuments changed as the climate transitioned from a humid environment to, eventually, an arid desert.
Early monuments were built by larger groups at one time. But as people dispersed with the increasingly drier climate, smaller groups began constructing monuments and eventually built many of them in several visits.
“The ...
After 20-year war, Afghanistan reports lowest well-being in recorded history
2025-05-28
In 2022, after U.S. troops withdrew from Afghanistan and the Taliban regained power, Afghans reported an average life satisfaction of 1.28 on a scale from 0 to 10—or from the worst possible life to the best possible life—a global, all-time low, according to a new study published today in Science Advances.
That is lower than life satisfaction scores recorded in more than 170 countries since 1946, when global ratings were first tallied. In 2022, the global mean life satisfaction rating recorded in the Gallup World Poll was 5.48.
Afghans also showed little hope for the future. When asked to imagine what their lives would be like in five years on the same ...
Vesicle cycle model reveals inner workings of brain synapse
2025-05-28
How do we think, feel, remember, or move? These processes involve synaptic transmission, in which chemical signals are transmitted between nerve cells using molecular containers called vesicles. Now, researchers have successfully modeled the vesicle cycle in unprecedented detail, revealing new information about the way our brain functions.
A joint study, published in Science Advances, between researchers at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST), Japan, and the University Medical Center Göttingen (UMG), Germany, has applied a unique computational modeling system, which considers the complicated interplay of vesicles, their cellular environments, activities and interactions, ...
Pollution from the Tijuana river affects air quality in San Diego
2025-05-28
The 120-mile Tijuana River flows from Baja California into the United States and discharges millions of gallons of wastewater — including sewage, industrial waste and runoff — into the Pacific Ocean every day, making it the dominant source of coastal pollution in the region. Wastewater pollution has been an ongoing problem for decades and is so severe that the nonprofit environmental group American Rivers recently named the Tijuana River America’s second most endangered river.
A new study from the University of California San Diego examines how pollutants ...
Alcohol abuse drug may halt trauma-induced cell death, especially in females
2025-05-28
Runaway cell death and inflammation triggered by severe trauma may be interrupted by a drug used to prevent alcohol abuse – and it may be particularly effective in females, according to new research led by University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine surgeon-scientists and published today in Science Translational Medicine.
The findings, based on observations in human patients and tested in mice, may lead to therapies that, if given in the first few hours after severe trauma – such as a falls or vehicle accidents – could ...
Recognizing those who build a vibrant technical community
2025-05-28
ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, today recognized five individuals with awards for their exemplary service to the computing field. Representing diverse areas, the 2024 award recipients were selected by their peers for building a vibrant community that benefits both their colleagues and the broader society. This year’s awardees drove advancements in computer science curriculum, cyberinfrastructures, computer science education, and assistive robotics. They will be formally recognized at ACM’s annual awards banquet on June 14, 2025, in San Francisco.
Dan Garcia, Teaching Professor, UC Berkeley, and Brian Harvey, Teaching ...
New study highlights health risks of ultrasonic cigarettes
2025-05-28
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- A study by scientists at the University of California, Riverside shows ultrasonic cigarettes, or u-cigarettes, marketed as a less harmful alternative to traditional e-cigarettes, may pose significant health risks due to the presence of harmful metals in their liquids and aerosols.
U-cigarettes have a “sonicator” that vibrates a liquid solution, usually containing nicotine, flavorings, and propylene glycol or vegetable glycerin, to produce microscopic droplets (aerosol). The technology uses high-frequency ultrasonic vibrations instead of heating coils ...
Can AI make critical communications chips easier to design?
2025-05-28
Radio frequency integrated circuits (RFIC) are critical to advancing communications capabilities—think moving from 5G networks to 6G—and many other technological applications. But these chips are also really hard to design.
A multi-university team with heavy involvement from industry leaders is working to change that. The team, led by researchers from The University of Texas at Austin, plans to infuse artificial intelligence into the design process for RFICs to reduce the difficulty of making these important chips.
"Design productivity is a huge problem for RFICs; in most ...
New chiral photonic device combines light manipulation with memory
2025-05-28
As fast as modern electronics have become, they could be much faster if their operations were based on light, rather than electricity. Fiber optic cables already transport information at the speed of light; to do computations on that information without translating it back to electric signals will require a host of new optical components.
Engineering researchers at the University of Utah have now developed such a device—one that can be adjusted on the fly to give light different degrees of circular polarization. Because information can be stored in a property of light known as chirality, the researchers’ device could serve as a multifunctional, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Self-employed women may be at significantly lower heart attack risk compared with women employed for salary or wages
US general military service may lower, rather than heighten, depression risk
Depression is linked to an increased risk of dementia in both mid and later life, finds a new study
The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health: New study highlights importance of caregiver concerns in detecting critical in illness hospitalised children
Around 1 in 7 US adults who smoke may have some degree of disability
Brazilian social program prevents over 8 million hospitalizations and 713,000 deaths in 20 years
Gaming seals reveal how cloudy water provides sense of direction
ASCO 2025 STUDY: New standard of care emerges for multiple myeloma
ASCO 2025: Alcohol-fueled cancer deaths are on the rise in the US
Heat-health plans overlook mental health risks
Rice anthropologists spotlight human toll of glacier loss
The Career Optimism Special Report™ Series: Moms in the Sandwich Generation, reveals critical insights on the career cost of dual caregiving and the imperative for increased employer support to serve
2021’s Hurricane Ida could have been even worse for NYC
Scholastic performance is a key concern for young cancer patients, study finds
University of Cincinnati Cancer Center study sheds light on enzyme’s role in driving lymphoma growth
New chemical engineering application expands possibilities for targeted drug delivery
New 3D flood visualizations help communities understand rising water risks
New Mayo Venture Partner (MVP) program announced to accelerate innovation
Solar power system installations impact less than 1 percent of Arkansas’ ag land
Ancient tooth enamel proteins reveal hidden diversity in African Paranthropus
Developmental and environmental factors early on may contribute to anxiety in adolescence
Quantum visualisation techniques to accelerate the arrival of fault-tolerant quantum computers
Listening to electrons talk
Ancient genomes shed light on human prehistory in East Asia
Save twice the ice by limiting global warming
UCC scientists develop new quantum visualization technique to identify materials for next generation quantum computing
Study finds birds nested in Arctic alongside dinosaurs
The plague bacillus became less virulent, prolonging the duration of two major pandemics
Revelations on the history of leprosy in the Americas
Leprosy in the Americas predates European contact, new study finds
[Press-News.org] Cats recognize their owner’s scentDomestic cats respond differently to the odor of their owner than that of an unfamiliar human