News | Living & Travel
27 Jun 2025 8:35
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Living & Travel

    Can your cat recognise you by scent? New study shows it’s likely

    If your cat spends a very long time sniffing something, it means the thing is unfamiliar.

    Julia Henning, PhD Candidate in Feline Behaviour, School of Animal and Veterinary Science, University of Adelaide
    The Conversation


    Ever wonder if your cat could pick you out of a line up?

    New research suggests they could … but maybe not in the way you would expect.

    Previous research has found that only 54% of cats could recognise humans by their face alone.

    So how does your cat know it’s you?

    Studying the sniff

    A new study published today in PLOS One suggests your cat can recognise you by your smell. This feat has not been studied before and may reveal another layer of depth within cat-human bonds.

    Cats often get a bad rap for being aloof or uncaring about the people in their lives, but a growing number of studies are finding the opposite to be true. We now know that cats learn the names we give them, cats and their guardians form their own communication style, and most cats will pick human social interaction over food, a choice even dogs struggle with.

    And now, thanks to this most recent study, we know that cats can identify their people by smell, something they also rely on to identify their close feline social groups.

    The study, by Yutaro Miyairi and colleagues at Tokyo University of Agriculture, investigated the ability of 30 cats to differentiate between their guardian and an unknown person based on scent alone.

    Cats in the study were presented with a plastic tube containing swab samples from under the armpit, behind the ear and between the toes of either the cat’s guardian or of a human they had never met. As a control, cats were also presented with an empty plastic tube.

    The results?

    Cats in the study spent longer sniffing the scent of an unknown person compared to the scent of their guardian or the empty tube.

    A shorter sniffing time suggests that when cats came across the smell of their guardian, they recognised it quickly and moved along. But when they came to the swabs from an unknown person, the cat sniffed longer, using their superior sense of smell to gather information about the scent.

    Similar patterns have been observed previously, with kittens sniffing the odour of unknown female cats longer than the odour of their own mother, and adult cats sniffing the faeces of unfamiliar cats longer than those within their social group.

    The findings of this new study may indicate that we, too, are in our cats’ social circle.

    Two cats in cardboard boxes with a black tuxie sniffing a ginger cat.
    Cats do use their sense of smell to tell apart familiar and unfamiliar cats. Chris Boyer/Unsplash

    The brain and the nose

    The study also found a tendency for cats to sniff familiar scents with their left nostril, while unknown scents were more often sniffed using their right. But when cats became familiar with a scent after sniffing for a while, they switched nostrils from the right to the left.

    While this may sound like an odd finding, it’s a pattern that has also been observed in dogs. Current research suggests this nostril preference may indicate that cats process and classify new information using their right brain hemisphere, while the left hemisphere takes over when a routine response is established.

    Close-up of the amber nose of a silver tabby cat.
    Cats will sniff things with different nostrils depending on whether the information is familiar or not. Kevin Knezic/Unsplash

    Why scent?

    Cats rely on scent to gather information about the world around them and to communicate.

    Scent exchange (through cheek-to-cheek rubbing and grooming each other) is used as a way to recognise cats in the same social circle, maintain group cohesion, and identify unfamiliar cats or other animals that may pose a threat or need to be avoided.

    Familiar scents can also be comforting to cats, reducing stress and anxiety and creating a sense of security within their environment.

    When you come back from a holiday, if you notice your cat being distant and acting like you’re a total stranger, it might be because you smell like one. Try taking a shower using your usual home products and put on some of your regular home clothing. The familiar scents should help you and your cat settle back into your old dynamic sooner.

    And remember, if your cat spends a lot of time sniffing someone else, it’s not because they prefer them. It’s likely because your scent is familiar and requires less work. Instead of being new and interesting, it might do something even better: help your cat feel at home.

    The Conversation

    Julia Henning does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2025 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other Living & Travel News
     26 Jun: Whose story is being told — and why? 4 questions museum visitors should ask themselves this school holidays
     26 Jun: Another airline's increasing capacity to Christchurch Airport over summer
     26 Jun: The Garden City's well and truly left its post-quake struggles in the past
     26 Jun: A New Zealand veterinary pharmaceutical company's recruiting more than 100 dogs for a world-first cannabis clinical trial
     25 Jun: Christchurch's Ruapuna Speedway is set to be bombarded by plenty of Supercars drivers BEFORE its new round roars into life next April
     25 Jun: Foodstuffs North Island has approval to build New Zealand's largest new supermarket
     25 Jun: Several changes to Otago public transport could be on the way
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The number of new caps in the All Blacks squad has grown from five to six More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Directors appear to be keeping realistic despite satisfaction economic recovery is around the corner More...



     Today's News

    Environment:
    Severe weather's also battering the upper North Island 8:27

    Auckland:
    One person has died, and another is in a critical condition following an early morning incident in Auckland's Manurewa 8:17

    Rugby League:
    Bulldogs coach Cameron Ciraldo's upbeat, despite an 8-6 loss to a resurgent Penrith to open round 17 of league's NRL 8:07

    Entertainment:
    Robert Downey Jr. says Pedro Pascal's "slow trajectory" to becoming a "household name" has reaffirmed his "faith" in the entertainment industry 8:05

    International:
    As world watched Israel-Iran war, in Gaza hundreds were killed 7:57

    Business:
    Directors appear to be keeping realistic despite satisfaction economic recovery is around the corner 7:57

    International:
    US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth unleashes on the media as he defends US strikes on Iran 7:47

    Law and Order:
    Police are searching for a 40-year-old Auckland man, wanted in relation to a number of offences 7:47

    Entertainment:
    John Cena has insisted his wife is his "number one passion" 7:35

    Health & Safety:
    Excitement as weight loss drug Wegovy hits our shores, but a warning that it won't be a silver bullet 7:27


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd