| Without being    able to talk to each other, rats use sniffing as one way to answer key    questions about strangers. Is that a female? Can I mate with her? Is this one    sick? What did he eat? — All of this information can be learned through odor    cues. But new research shows    that the act of sniffing itself might serve its own social function, allowing    rats to reaffirm their hierarchical status and maintain order. Daniel    Wesson, a    neuroscientist at Case Western Reserve University    School of Medicine, studied how pairs of rats sniffed each other when    they were placed in the same enclosure. In initial observations, Wesson saw    that when one rat started sniffing another's body or behind, both rats ramped    up their level of sniffing. But when one rat started sniffing the other's    face, the other rat typically backed off and turned down its level of    sniffing. Further investigations    showed that dominant rats (larger, more aggressive ones) didn't tamp    down their sniffing, and sometimes increased it, when a subordinate rat    sniffed them in the face. But when dominant rats started smelling their    subordinates head on, and the subordinates failed to cut back on their    sniffing, the top rats were quick to engage in aggressive behavior (kicking,    biting or jumping on the other rat). The results suggest that sniffing can    help high-ranking rats assert dominance and allow subordinate rats to appease    their superiors and prevent aggression. Wesson saw the same    results when he inhibited the rats' sense of    smell, which bolsters his claim that there's more to sniffing than    odor-detection. And when he gave some of the rats oxytocin, a brain chemical    that's been shown to enhance bonding and ease the pressure of hierarchies,    these sniffing displays and aggression vanished. [That's Odd! The 10 Weirdest Animal Discoveries] It's still not clear why    only face-sniffing seems to serve a social function for rats, while    body-sniffing and butt-sniffing don't. Wesson said one possibility could have    to do with the fact that face-to-face interactions are very dangerous for a    rat, as an injury to the throat or neck could be deadly. "When animals come    face-to-face with each other, they more or less have to be on their best    behavior, otherwise they risk getting hurt," Wesson told LiveScience. "Another possibility is that there    are cues given off during sniffing that can only be communicated when animals    are in proximity with each other." Wesson said he hopes to    explore the circuits in the brain that are activated when animals are engaged    in this behavior, and to learn more about why animals decide to become    aggressive, as well as which brain problems might cause animals to inappropriately    deal with social cues. The research was detailed    in the journal Current Biology. Follow LiveScience on    Twitter @livescience, Facebook or    Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com. 
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