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by jozydapozy 2709 days ago
Seems like the virus has a greater chance of spreading when its host is behaving more social.
5 comments

That's a freaky (sorry, but it fits) idea. I mean, it does seem that rabies increases the likelihood that its hosts will bite others. And respiratory viruses cause sneezing. So it's not impossible that selection pressure could drive viruses to modify behavior of hosts in other ways. Something like black-box decompiling.
Fevers are a response of the human immune system, and so are subject to human selection pressures.
But pathogens have a selective pressure to game the host immune system in spreading them further
Or you are more likely to get help if you are a bit more thankful than normally
That's a very good counterpoint. Human species did evolve to be social "pack" creatures already.
I have a probably TMI story about a case of food poisoning my wife and I had that was prefaced by us being especially frisky for a few hours — we even both said something to each other about how unusual it was. I’ve always wondered if there was a connection.
I see a possible multi-billion research program there.
They say that ~50% of a lethal dose of just about anything will get you high.
I want to know more.