Abstract

Disgust is an evolved psychological system for protecting organisms from infection through disease avoidant behaviour. This ‘behavioural immune system’, present in a diverse array of species, exhibits universal features that orchestrate hygienic behaviour in response to cues of risk of contact with pathogens. However, disgust is also a dynamic adaptive system. Individuals show variation in pathogen avoidance associated with psychological traits like having a neurotic personality, as well as a consequence of being in certain physiological states such as pregnancy or infancy. Three specialized learning mechanisms modify the disgust response: the Garcia effect, evaluative conditioning and the law of contagion. Hygiene behaviour is influenced at the group level through social learning heuristics such as ‘copy the frequent’. Finally, group hygiene is extended symbolically to cultural rules about purity and pollution, which create social separations and are enforced as manners. Cooperative hygiene endeavours such as sanitation also reduce pathogen prevalence. Our model allows us to integrate perspectives from psychology, ecology and cultural evolution with those of epidemiology and anthropology. Understanding the nature of disease avoidance psychology at all levels of human organization can inform the design of programmes to improve public health.

Highlights

  • THE PROBLEM OF PARASITESParasites are ubiquitous; in some ecosystems their biomass rivals that of predators [1]

  • We look at disgust and disease avoidance behaviour in human individuals and in human social groups as an adaptive system

  • GROUP HYGIENE BEHAVIOUR So far we have looked at the effects of proximate factors on disgust sensitivity in brains and the hygienic behaviour of individual humans

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Parasites are ubiquitous; in some ecosystems their biomass rivals that of predators [1]. Natural selection has designed elegant and interlocking solutions to protect animals from parasite damage, including a range of physiological barriers and a complex immune system [3]. Natural selection has produced a solution to the problem of hard-to-detect parasites by designing a system that is sensitive to local information about infection risk. This system responds to parasite pressure not just over evolutionary time, but over lifetimes, using what cues it can. This may be information about an individual’s current state, its history of sickness and exposure to disgusting experiences, or what it has learnt from the local culture and from the hygiene practices of others. This, may, in turn, offer insights that are important to the practice of public health

THE UNIVERSALITY OF DISGUST
THE VARIABILITY OF DISGUST
DISGUST IN BRAINS
HYGIENE BEHAVIOUR
GROUP HYGIENE BEHAVIOUR
THE EFFECTS OF CULTURE ON DISGUST AND HYGIENE
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
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