Crowd Salience Heightens Tolerance to Healthy Facial Features

IF 1.2 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL
Mitch Brown, Ryan E. Tracy, Steven G. Young, Donald F. Sacco
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Objective

Recent findings suggest crowd salience heightens pathogen-avoidant motives, serving to reduce individuals’ infection risk through interpersonal contact. Such experiences may similarly facilitate the identification, and avoidance, of diseased conspecifics. The current experiment sought to replicate and extend previous crowding research.

Methods

In this experiment, we primed participants at two universities with either a crowding or control experience before having them evaluate faces manipulated to appear healthy or diseased by indicating the degree to which they would want to interact with them.

Results

Crowding-primed participants reported a more heightened preferences for healthy faces than control-primed participants. Additionally, crowd salience reduced aversion toward healthy faces but did not heighten aversion to diseased faces.

Conclusion

Results suggest crowding appears to heighten tolerance for health cues given the heightened proximal threat of infections through interpersonal contact within crowded environments. Conversely, this work extends previous findings by indicating this preference is not rooted in an aversion to cues of poor health. We frame findings from a threat management perspective in understanding how crowding fosters sensitivity toward pathogenic threats.

Abstract Image

人群突出提高对健康面部特征的容忍度
最近的研究结果表明,群体显著性增强了病原体回避动机,有助于降低个体通过人际接触感染的风险。类似地,这些经验可能有助于识别和避免患病的同种动物。目前的实验试图复制和扩展以前的拥挤研究。方法在这项实验中,我们让两所大学的参与者有拥挤或控制的经历,然后让他们通过指示他们想与他们互动的程度来评估被操纵的脸是否看起来健康或有病。结果人群引导的参与者比对照引导的参与者对健康面孔的偏好更高。此外,人群显著性降低了对健康面孔的厌恶,但并没有增加对患病面孔的厌恶。结论研究结果表明,考虑到在拥挤环境中通过人际接触感染的近端威胁增加,拥挤似乎提高了对健康提示的耐受性。相反,这项工作扩展了之前的发现,表明这种偏好并非源于对健康状况不佳的厌恶。我们从威胁管理的角度来理解拥挤如何培养对致病威胁的敏感性。
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来源期刊
Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology
Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology PSYCHOLOGY, BIOLOGICAL-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Adaptive Human Behavior and Physiology is an international interdisciplinary scientific journal that publishes theoretical and empirical studies of any aspects of adaptive human behavior (e.g. cooperation, affiliation, and bonding, competition and aggression, sex and relationships, parenting, decision-making), with emphasis on studies that also address the biological (e.g. neural, endocrine, immune, cardiovascular, genetic) mechanisms controlling behavior.
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