Instead of asking new mates about where they stand on key political issues, you could just lean forward and take a big whiff.

In a study recently published in the American Journal of Political Science, lead investigator Rose McDermott, Ph.D., of Brown University, found that adults were more likely to be attracted to the body odors of people who had similar political beliefs and repelled by the body odors of those with opposing ideologies.

"People could not predict the political ideology of others by smell if you asked them, but they differentially found the smell of those who aligned with them more attractive,” said McDermott in a press release about the study. "So I believe smell conveys important information about long-term affinity in political ideology that becomes incorporated into a key component of subconscious attraction.”

Mates tend to end up with people with similar political beliefs more than any other trait besides religion, yet scientists still don’t full understand why this is, writes McDermott in her study. Her finding suggests that the nose may have an important role to play in sniffing out a potential suitor by contributing to a “subconscious sexual attraction” to certain body odors.

To test her theory, McDermott recruited 146 adults under age 40 to be part of the experiment. Ten from the group identified as staunch liberals and 11 as staunch conservatives, with the rest ranking in the middle.

Researchers collected body odor samples from the 21 deeply political cohort and asked the remaining 125 participants to sniff the samples, which were randomized, and rate them on a five-point scale of attractiveness. They were also asked to guess the political views of each body odor's owner.

In a "blind" test, people were most attracted to the body odors of those who were later revealed to have similar political beliefs, and repelled by the odors that turned out to belong to their ideological opposites.

To illustrate the extreme nature of these reactions, the study authors included this story:

In one particularly illustrative case, a participant asked the experimenter if she could take one of the vials home with her because she thought it was "the best perfume I ever smelled"; the vial was from a male who shared an ideology similar to the evaluator. She was preceded with another respondent with an ideology opposite to the person who provided the exact same sample; this participant reported that the vial had "gone rancid" and suggested it needed to be replaced.

So how does this come into play when choosing a mate? While McDermott isn't saying that our nose does the picking, she does suggest that smells can operate on a subtler level to regulate certain hormones and influence your moods.

"While people can choose to dismiss or ignore these signals in favor of more conscious considerations, it appears nature stacks the deck to make politically similar partners more attractive to each other in unconscious ways, at least over the long haul,” she writes in the study.

Of course, there are more potential reasons that people are drawn to certain body odors besides political ideology. McDermott’s research builds on past studies that suggest people’s noses prefer mates that are socially compatible and genetically dissimilar to them, which would make reproduction more successful and broaden the immune systems of their potential offspring.

A 2012 study from UCLA researchers found that men were more drawn to a woman’s scent if she was ovulating (the most fertile time of the month) than if she wasn’t ovulating. In the same vein, researchers in 2007 found that women who were lap dancers earned more money in tips when they were ovulating than in other parts of the menstrual cycle.