Does tattooing benefit the immune system? The inking of immunity.

Backed by Rob Colyer, Eddie Lynn, Greg Sikes-Mitchell, Marina Roberts, Vicki Lynn, Robert Lewis, Bob Jarvenpa, Justin Lowry, Angela Greenaway, Greg Downey, and 98 other backers
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Anthropology
DOI: 10.18258/11127
$6,304
Raised of $5,966 Goal
105%
Funded on 6/03/18
Successfully Funded
  • $6,304
    pledged
  • 105%
    funded
  • Funded
    on 6/03/18

Project Results

This paper is about results from the previous field season, but the implications are important for the funded project. We found that the accumulated short-term stress of multiple tattoos or hours being tattooed is associated with enhanced immune response. This suggests that culturally moderated short-term stressors are important throughout life for immunological health.

About This Project

Our team studies cultural impacts on health, specifically those of tattooing on the immune system. We expand on our previous study that suggests tattooing may "inoculate" the immune system. Our research takes place among Polynesian tattooists, who retain some of the oldest and most extensive tattooing practices in the world. We will collect saliva samples from over 100 people receiving tattoos at the Northwest Tatau Festival to examine multiple immunological factors.

Ask the Scientists

Join The Discussion

What is the context of this research?

We previously found a positive association between tattoo experience and relatively elevated secretory immunoglobulin A (from pre-posttest) after receiving a tattoo (Lynn et al. 2016). Immunosuppression is often a result of acute stress, so we hypothesized the elevation was due to stressor habituation, as with exercise or an inoculation. We began retesting this among Polynesian tattooists, whose practices are among the most extensive and oldest in the world. Our preliminary analysis suggests tattooing may be more like an inoculation, consistent with research indicating the immune system holds ink in place (Baranska et al. 2018). However, there are multiple immune factors at work that need to be considered to understand this biocultural interaction.

What is the significance of this project?

We will explore the possibility that tattooing is an example of cultural practices that can stimulate beneficial immune responses. Environmental stressors at different stages of life have important priming effects on the immune system. Exposure to pathogens and dirt may be important during early development in later immunological health. This "hygiene hypothesis" has been linked to overactive immune systems in developed countries and epidemics of allergies and autoimmune disease. Conversely, tattooing has been widely practiced throughout the world for thousands of years despite dangers in exposing the body to potential infection. Lower rates of autoimmune disorders in developing countries may be related to lifelong exposures to culturally-moderated environmental stressors.

What are the goals of the project?

We will collect saliva samples from approximately 100 volunteers receiving tattoos at the Northwest Tatau Festival before and after they receive tattoos to be able to analyze health factors such as immunoglobulin A, cortisol, alpha-amylase, interleukin 6, and C-reactive protein. We will also collect multiple samples throughout one day from around 25 volunteers to examine these factors at a finer grain. We will compare these biological markers to tattoo experience, which we collect via questionnaires. We ask when people received all of their tattoos, how long each tattoo took, and how much of their bodies are tattooed. We control for age, body size, health, and other personal influences on biological responses.

Budget

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Your contribution will help pay for airfare to and from Tacoma, which is where the Northwest Tatau Festival will take place, and to rent a car to get us and our equipment and samples around while there. We will stay in the conference hotel so to easily access participants. We will arrive early to train student research assistants. Your contribution will help us hire local Polynesian undergraduate research assistants and be able to buy them lunch while working for us. There is a large diaspora Polynesian community in the Tacoma-Seattle area, and it is critical that we help develop young scholars within the community we are studying. Finally, your contribution will enable us to purchases data collection supplies, including saliva collection tubes, gloves, and containers for collecting and storing the biological data, and to pay for postage to ship the samples to our collaborating lab for processing.

Endorsed by

For decades the subfields of anthropology have tended to box themselves into their respective field’s methodologies and literature. Dr. Lynn and Dr. Howell’s research project, Inking of Immunity, is a fantastic example of how interdisciplinary the field of anthropology can be. Because, humans are interdisciplinary! We have cultural phenomena that not only affect our social relationships and cultural practices but also our health and behavior. Tattoos are a perfect example of this. I can’t wait to see what more we can learn from this team.
For the past two years, I have been using the fascinating preliminary results from this work in my classroom. Students always find it fascinating that there is something far deeper to tattooing than just body art. Tattoos were likely (and potentially still are) a biological signal for health and well being. This work is beyond cool, relevant, and evolutionarily important.
I have known the members of this team for many years, and collaborated with one of the team (C.D. Lynn) on an earlier study of tattooing and immune function based in Tuscaloosa. I hold the team in the highest regard as scientists. Given the popularity of tattooing today, this study will help us understand the biology of a cultural phenomenon in a way that is certainly scientifically interesting, and may have important implications for tattooing and health.
I'll bet you or someone you know has a tattoo. But let me ask you a question -- how much scientific research do you think is done on tattoos? (Answer: not much.) Now, how much of that research do you think is done on problems related to tattooing? (Spoiler: that's all of it.) Drs. Lynn and Howells are THE people looking into how tattoos might be beneficial. This is your chance to support ground-breaking research!
The question seems obvious, though no one has really asked it: is tattooing such a widespread practice across cultures because it somehow benefits us, beyond just being cool? Once again the creative minds of the Howells-Lynn research team have figured out how to answer it, and in a way that's not been done before. It's the ultimate synergy of biology and culture!! Go, scientists, go!
Tattoos and health are (and always will be) hot topics. Research like this study explores new questions AND gets people excited about science. It's a win-win. I worked as a lab assistant with Dr. Christopher Lynn and was very privileged to see some of the work leading up to this current project. If there is any project or team that deserves backing, it's this one!
Tattooing has been practiced for at least 5,000 years by cultures from across the globe, yet meaningful and unbiased scientific or anthropological studies of tattooing have been largely absent - until recently! The past decade of research has dramatically reshaped understanding of the antiquity and cultural importance of tattoo traditions. This project by Lynn and Howells seeks to add an entirely new dimension to our knowledge by examining the intersection of cultural practices and biological data. I'm excited to see this research move ahead!
I am a former student of Dr. Lynn’s and can attest to his dedication and knowledgeability. This project not only mirrors the increasing level of tattoo acceptance in society and in the workplace, but fosters the kind of intersectionality between academic fields and common interests that is so poignantly interesting. As both a tattooed individual and a health care professional, I am invested in this area of research and its relevance to society. Very few studies regarding tattoos exist at all, so this is a research vein rich with possibilities.
As both a journalist and tattooed human, I find tattooing a fascinating subject. It's many layers are often examined -- from tools and practices to insights into its practitioners, and of course its overall visual aesthetics. The psychology is also a common focus, with different images, whether celebratory or commemorative, offering emotional benefits. This project, however, explores a different and profound realm, promising intriguing results! This erudite and passionate team needs your support! Go science!
I spend a lot of time thinking about how to help undergraduates holistically understand health & human behavior. Within the past year, the one thing that has most lit up a classroom was when I introduced Lynn & Howell’s work on tattooing into a discussion about infectious disease prevalence & immune response. Suddenly, my students saw a clear connection between culture, biology, & health, and I got to bask in the reflected glory of knowing such awesome scientists who are conducting this vital, interdisciplinary, & altogether fascinating work.

Project Timeline

This phase of our project will be completed in approximately one year of being funded. After data collection, samples will be sent to the Muehlenbein Lab at Baylor University for biological analysis. Additional funds are being sought for those analyses. We will report on those analyses at academic meetings and invited talks and begin drafting reports of our findings for scholarly and popular venues. A long-term goal is to produce a book about the biology and culture of tattooing.

May 04, 2018

Project Launched

Jun 25, 2018

Travel to the Northwest Tatau Festival in Tacoma, WA to train assistants.

Jun 29, 2018

Collect data from 100 volunteers receiving tattoos at Northwest Tatau Festival.

Jul 02, 2018

Ship samples to Baylor University for analyses.

Meet the Team

Christopher Dana Lynn
Christopher Dana Lynn
Associate Professor of Anthropology

Affiliates

University of Alabama
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Michaela Howells
Michaela Howells
Assistant Professor of Anthropology

Affiliates

University of North Carolina Wilmington
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Team Bio

Our team has extensive experience studying cultural impacts on health, including previous research on tattooing, Polynesian communities, and immunology. Chris has conducted previous work on tattooing and immune response in the U.S. and American Samoa. Michaela has worked with Polynesian communities and in American Samoa for nearly 8 years. Michael is among the foremost anthropological immunologists in the world. All three have tattoos, and Chris and Michael consider themselves avid collectors.

Christopher Dana Lynn

I am an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Alabama and director of the Human Behavioral Ecology Research Group. In addition to tattooing, I study biocultural medical anthropology, cognitive evolution, cooperation, and focused attention, which ranges from research on Pentecostal speaking in tongues to fireside relaxation. I also coordinate an outreach program called Anthropology is Elemental, which involves training undergraduates to teach anthropology and sending them out as volunteers to underrepresented schools.

I became interested in tattooing culture while living in New York City in the 1990s. Tattooing was illegal from 1961 until 1997, and tattoo studios sprang up like mushrooms after a storm when it became legal again. I played in punk rocks bands and worked in the music industry, so tattoos were all around (and on) me. The Inking of Immunity project began when a student approached me for a way to study tattooing from the perspective of medical anthropology. Various students in my lab have worked on the study over the years as it has developed.

I have two publications about our tattoo research (Lynn et al. 2016, Lynn & Medeiros 2017), have published a book on evolution education in the American South (Lynn et al. 2017) and articles on the role of campfires in cognitive evolution (Lynn 2014), the psychocultural influences of speaking in tongues among Pentecostals (Lynn et al. 2010, 2011, 2015; Lynn 2013), and several on my teaching and service (Funkhouser et al. 2016; James et al. 2015; Howells et al. 2017; Lynn et al. 2014; Spaulding et al. 2014; Stein et al. 2016). With Dr. Howells, I have an article in press about dual disease burden and Zika in American Samoa and articles in the works about structural impediments to intersectionality in Anthropology.

Finally, I am husband and proud father of three teenage boys.

Michaela Howells

I am an Assistant Professor of Anthropology in Biological Anthropology at the University of North Carolina Wilmington specializing in the intersection of biology and culture. I am particularly interested in social determinants of health surrounding human development.

I am the director of the GAPS (Growth Adaptation Pregnancy Stress) Lab where we ask questions about human adaptations across the globe. I have conducted research in American Samoa for the past 7 years, and have co-directed a field school in Bali Indonesia for the past 3 years.

I am a Seattle native, and an avid swing dancer.


Additional Information

There are many tattoo festivals around the world, but we focus on Polynesian tattooing because it is among the oldest extant tattoo cultures in the world. Polynesian tattooing is still administered using traditional hand tapping methods, alongside contemporary electric methods, as well as with modified traditional tools. Polynesians are frequently extensively tattooed, and receiving a traditional tattoo has tremendous cultural meaning and importance. Thus, Polynesian practices provide a window into the historical aspects of tattooing, as well as an opportunity to test numerous aspects that may have different biological influences. While our some of our previous research has been conducted in the Samoan Islands, we have been invited by the Samoan hosts to the Northwest Tatau Festival in Tacoma, Washington as "official scientists" of the festival. There are numerous Polynesian diaspora communities in the continental U.S. that also maintain traditional and modern tattooing cultures. There will be nearly 100 Polynesian tattoo artists at the festival tattooing people from all over the world.


Project Backers

  • 112Backers
  • 105%Funded
  • $6,304Total Donations
  • $56.29Average Donation
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