Been feeling a little strange lately? A bit impulsive, maybe? Feeling a sudden urge to get a pet cat? Sorry to say it, but maybe you’re infected with a scary mind control parasite: specifically, the paraside Toxoplasma gondii.
Or… maybe not. It turns out that, despite popular belief, the supposed behavioural effects of T. gondii are supported by very weak scientific evidence. In this episode of The Studies Show, Tom and Stuart explain.
The Studies Show is sponsored by Works in Progress magazine. It’s the no.1 destination online if you’re interested in “Progress Studies”: research on how things got better in the past and might get better in future. Whether it’s medical technology, construction materials, or policy innovation, you can read detailed essays on it at worksinprogress.co.
Show notes
* Alex Tabbarok’s review of Parasite, arguing people took the wrong lessons from the film
* Zombie ant fungus description
* Theory for how the horsehair worm affects its host
* Scepticism about whether it involves “mind control”
* Description of acute toxoplasmosis
* Tiny study on rats and cat urine
* Well-cited (but also tiny) PNAS study on rats, mice, and cat urine
* Review of toxoplasma and behavioural effects
* Very useful sceptical article about toxoplasma’s effects on rodent and human behaviour (source of the quotes on Alzheimer’s)
* Another (somewhat older) sceptical article
* Study on getting humans to smell cat (and other) urine
* Preprint on (self-reported!) toxoplasma infection and psychological traits
* Initial, smaller entrepreneurship study
* Later, larger entrepreneurship study (from Denmark)
* Meta-analysis on whether childhood cat exposure is related to schizophrenia
* Dunedin Cohort Study paper on toxoplasma and life outcomes
* “The Toxoplasma of Rage” on Slate Star Codex
Credits
* The Studies Show is produced by Julian Mayers at Yada Yada Productions.