Today’s Solutions: December 19, 2025

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM

We’ve all instinctively recoiled from the person sneezing on a train or the child with a chickenpox rash at the playground. But what if your immune system is reacting too, before you ever come into physical contact with a virus?

A new study published in Nature Neuroscience suggests exactly that: the sight of someone who looks infectious may be enough to trigger a subtle immune response in your body. Using virtual reality (VR), brain scans, and blood tests, scientists have uncovered a fascinating connection between perceived contagion and biological readiness.

“Although surprising, our finding that immune responses can be triggered by simulated infections presented in VR is consistent with the principle of the smoke detector in biological systems,” write the authors, who emphasize just how sensitive the human body is to environmental cues.

The experiment: avatars, reactions, and brain scans

Researchers fitted 248 healthy participants with VR headsets and conducted five separate experiments. Participants viewed three same-sex faces with neutral expressions repeatedly approaching them in VR.

Then, the groups were shown the same avatars, some now displaying signs of viral illness like facial rashes. In certain trials, other participants viewed the faces with fearful expressions instead.

To assess behavioral and physiological reactions, participants completed a series of tests. In one, they pressed a button as quickly as possible after a mild touch to the face while an avatar approached. When the avatars showed signs of infection, participants responded faster even when the avatars appeared farther away. This suggests an increased state of alertness or perceived threat.

EEG results confirmed that the brain’s peripersonal space system, which governs the area immediately surrounding our bodies, lit up differently when participants saw sick-looking avatars compared to neutral or fearful ones.

The changes weren’t just in the brain. Functional MRI scans revealed increased communication between the brain’s threat-detection network and the hypothalamus, which regulates many core body functions, including aspects of immune response.

Immune system shifts in the blood

Most remarkably, the team identified measurable changes in participants’ blood after exposure to the avatars. They found increased activity in a family of immune cells called innate lymphoid cells (ILCs), which are known to be early responders in the immune system.

“[In terms of cells], we saw mainly that there is an activation of an immune cell family called the innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) that [are] early responders in immunity to basically alarm other immune cells,” explained Professor Camilla Jandus of the University of Geneva, a co-author of the study.

Interestingly, similar patterns of ILC activation were seen in individuals who had received an influenza vaccine, suggesting that this kind of immune priming may mirror early-stage responses seen after actual exposure.

What it all means

Experts not involved in the study offered both praise and caution. Dr. Esther Diekhof of the University of Hamburg said the findings align with other research into preemptive immune responses. “The study provides yet another good example for the existence of a mechanism that responds to potential contagion threats even before the immune system has come into contact with pathogens,” she noted.

However, Professor Benedict Seddon of University College London emphasized that more questions remain. Notably, whether this early immune activation actually improves the body’s ability to fend off an infection is still unclear. “When we get infected, by Sars-CoV for instance, it can take a day or two for the infection to establish and for the immune system to become aware of it and respond,” he said. “[That can be] a long time after the initial encounter that stimulated this short-lived mobilisation.”

A deeper look at the brain-body connection

This research underscores how the immune system and the brain communicate in complex and subtle ways. The idea that we might begin mounting a biological defense just by seeing signs of illness in others reveals how deeply attuned we are to our environment.

It also opens new questions for science: Could these findings inform how we design spaces during flu season? Could we better understand social behavior around disease? While the practical applications are still emerging, one thing is clear: your brain and immune system are working together long before you reach for the hand sanitizer.

Source study: Nature Neuroscience— Neural anticipation of virtual infection triggers an immune response

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