Do emotional or pain-induced tears differ?

Can you tell why someone was crying just from looking at their tears? And why do people get so watery-eyed in the first place?
19 August 2014

Question

Do emotional or pain-induced tears differ?
Is it possible to test tears and deduce if they are related to physical pain or emotion, if so what is the difference between the
two?
Thanks :)

Answer

Professor Vingerhoets - Crying predominantly expresses powerlessness or the strong desire to be reunited with a lost valued person, object or location. The advantage of crying aloud is that it is emitted in all directions. It is then very likely to be heard by parents, who can provide care, but this means it may also be heard by predators. Most mammal offspring will make distress calls if separated from their carers, however humans are the only species who shed emotional tears. The advantage of crying tears, a visual signal, is that it cannot be detected in the same way by predators but may easily be seen by the parents or caregivers.Physical pain tears and emotional tears are both produced by the same glands in the eyes. Like other glands (such as salivary glands or sweat glands) they are connected to our blood stream. Some ingredients of the tears originate from the blood, and the composition of blood can be effected by your hormones, which in turn are affected by stresses and your emotional state. This could lead us to think that tears produced in different emotional states could differ in their composition. However, a great deal of mystery still surrounds this idea. Over 30 years ago, American researchers compared the biochemical composition of emotional and irritant (onion) tears and found that the emotional tears contained more proteins. However, that has never been replicated and we do not know what this would mean.

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