Previous studies have found that at least three sources contribute to the airborne cloud of bacteria surrounding us: dust, emissions from clothing and emissions from the person, the researchers said.
In the new study, researchers asked participants to sit alone in a sanitised chamber filled with filtered air. To reduce the number of particles coming from clothing, each participant was given an identical new, clean outfit.
Each participant sat in a plastic rolling chair that had been disinfected, and was given a sterilised laptop to use to communicate with the scientists outside the chamber (they were also allowed to use the laptop for entertainment purposes), according to the researchers.
In one experiment, the researchers compared the air in the chamber to that of a neighbouring, unoccupied chamber. Three people participated in this experiment, and each sat in the chamber for a 4-hour session and then a 2-hour session, with a break in between.
After 2 hours, the researchers found they were able to determine whether a person was present in the chamber based on looking only at the bacteria from the air samples.
In the second experiment, eight new people were asked to sit in the chamber for two 90-minute periods.
"We expected that we would be able to detect the human microbiome in the air around a person, but we were surprised to find that we could identify most of the occupants just by sampling their microbial cloud," said James Meadow, the lead author of the study from the University of Oregon.
For female participants, the researchers also noted the presence of common vaginal bacteria.
Although the results of the study suggest that the findings could be used in forensics, the researchers cautioned that further research is required because the patterns they found "are likely to be more nuanced in a crowd of occupants, in a larger indoor space or in the presence of resuspended dust," the researchers said.
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