Why Do We Like Our Own Farts

Why Do We Like Our Own Farts

Your farts may smell like roses...to you! br Get the AsapSCIENCE book! br Watch The Science of Beards: br br Written by Rachel Salt, Mitchell Moffit and Greg Brown br br Instagram and Twitter: @whalewatchmeplz and @mitchellmoffit br Clickable: and br br Facebook: br Twitter: br Tumblr: br Vine: Search "AsapSCIENCE" on vine! br br Created by Mitchell Moffit (twitter @mitchellmoffit) and Gregory Brown (twitter @whalewatchmeplz). br br Further Reading-- br br Levitt, M.D., et al., Evaluation of an extremely flatulent patient. The American Jouranl of Gastroenterology, 1998. 93(11): p. 2276-2281 br br McBurney, D.H., J.M. Levine, and P.H. Cavanaugh, Psychophysical and social ratings of human body odor. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1976. 135(3): p. 135-138. br br Case, T.I., B.M. Repacholi, and R.J. Stevenson, My baby doesn't smell as bad as yours: The plasticity of disgust. Evolution and Human Behaviour, 2005. 27: p. 357-365. br br Curtis, V., R. Aunger, and T. Rabie, Evidence that disgust evolved to protect from risk of disease. Proceedings of the Royal Society, 2004. 271: p. 130-134. br br Hart, B.L., Behavioural adaptations to pathogens and parasites: five strategies. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 1990. 14: p. 273-294. br br Haidt, J., C. McCauley, and P. Rozin, Individual differences in sensitivity to disgust: a scale sampling seven domains of disgust elicitiors. Personality and Individual Differences, 1994. 16(5): p. 701-713. br br Somerville, L.H., T.F. Heatherton, and W.M. Kelley, Anterior cingulate cortex responds differently to expectancy violations and social rejections. Nature Neuroscience, 2006. 9(8): p. 1007-1008.


User: AsapSCIENCE

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Uploaded: 2016-03-10

Duration: 02:55

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