Pathogen stress heightens sensorimotor dimensions in the human collective semantic space.

Ze Fu, Huimin Chen, Zhan Liu, Maosong Sun, Zhiyuan Liu, Yanchao Bi
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Abstract

Infectious diseases have been major causes of death throughout human history and are assumed to broadly affect human psychology. However, whether and how conceptual processing, an internal world model central to various cognitive processes, adapts to such salient stress variables remains largely unknown. To address this, we conducted three studies examining the relationship between pathogen severity and semantic space, probed through the main neurocognitive semantic dimensions revealed by large-scale text analyses: one cross-cultural study (across 43 countries) and two historical studies (over the past 100 years). Across all three studies, we observed that increasing pathogen severity was associated with an enhancement of the sensory-motor dimension in the collective semantic space. These patterns remained robust after controlling for the effects of sociocultural variables, including economic wealth and societal norms of tightness. These results highlight the universal dynamic mechanisms of collective semantics, such that pathogen stress potentially drives sensorially oriented semantic processing.

病原体应激提高了人类集体语义空间的感觉运动维度。
在整个人类历史上,传染病一直是导致死亡的主要原因,并被认为广泛影响人类的心理。然而,概念加工作为各种认知过程的核心内部世界模型,是否以及如何适应这些显著的压力变量,在很大程度上仍然未知。为了解决这个问题,我们进行了三项研究,考察了病原体严重程度与语义空间之间的关系,通过大规模文本分析揭示的主要神经认知语义维度进行了探讨:一项跨文化研究(跨越43个国家)和两项历史研究(过去100年)。在所有三项研究中,我们观察到病原体严重程度的增加与集体语义空间中感觉-运动维度的增强有关。在控制了社会文化变量(包括经济财富和社会规范)的影响后,这些模式仍然稳健。这些结果强调了集体语义的普遍动态机制,例如病原体胁迫可能驱动感官导向的语义加工。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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