Abstract

While disgust is functional in preventing contagion from pathogens, it also plays a role in various psychopathologies. Disgust responses towarddirt, bodily secretions, certain types of food, and sexual stimuli typically emerge during (early) childhood. However, there is a lack of research on how disgust develops. This cross-sectional study investigated whether there are age-related differences in subjective, self-reported disgust between early and late adolescenceand whether there are differences for distinctive types of disgust (core-disgust, sex-related, food-related). Using an online survey, 240 Dutch children (116 female, 124 male) aged 9 through 16 years rated the extent to which they found the different types of stimuli disgusting or not on a VAS scale. The results showed that only the disgust responses to sex-related stimuli decreased with age, whereas disgust towardthe other categories did not show any age-related differences. Overall girls reported somewhat higher disgust ratings than boys for sex-related stimuli, but not for the other categories. The present study offers important new angles for future research, which might further disentangle the mechanisms through which the changes occur.

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