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Home Tech

Brain parasite may help business tycoons

by The Editor
July 26, 2018
in Tech
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Brain parasite may help business tycoons
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A parasite that infects the brain could be the secret weapon of business tycoons, as it affects a person's risk-taking behaviour, a study says.

Researchers said that entrepreneurship was characterised as a "high risk, high reward" activity which was often accompanied by a loss of one's financial stability.

But toxoplasma gondii, a single-celled parasite that is spread by cats, can cause personality changes that appear to increase a person's willingness to take risks.

A study of almost 1,300 US students showed that those exposed to the parasite were 1.7 times more likely to be majoring in business.

It looked at professionals attending business events and found they were almost twice as likely to have started their own businesses if they had been infected with the parasite.

An examination of databases from 42 countries also revealed that the infection's prevalence was a "consistent, positive predictor of entrepreneurial activity".

The parasite has been proven to make rats take more risks around natural predators such as cats, showing that the smell of cat urine is not as repulsive to them and so they are more likely to stray into a cat's living environment.

Image: The single-celled parasite is spread by cats

Dr Stefanie Johnson, from the University of Colorado's Leeds School of Business, and her co-authors wrote: "Populations with higher T gondii infection had greater intentions to start a business and higher levels of active entrepreneurship behaviours.

"Countries with higher T gondii prevalence generally had a lower fraction of respondents who cited 'fear of failure' as a factor preventing them from initiating a business-related enterprise."

The research is contained in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The infection rarely produces symptoms apart from mild flu-like illness but it has also been linked to car accidents and suicide.

More from UK

It can only reproduce in domestic cats and their relatives and passes to animals that come into contact with cat faeces.

According to Scientific American, around one in every three people worldwide carry the parasites in their heads.

Original Article

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