Abstract

To face threats posed by pathogens, natural selection designed the Behavioral Immune System, which orchestrates several responses aimed to prevent contact with pathogens. Memory seems to augment this system. Using line drawings of objects, previous studies found that objects described as having been touched by sick people were better remembered than those described as having been touched by healthy people. The current work was designed to replicate and extend these initial studies using more ecologically-valid stimuli-photographs of real objects being held by hands. These photographs were shown along with descriptors (Experiment 1a) or faces (Experiment 1b) denoting the health status of the person whose hands were holding the objects. Experiments 2 and 3 used, as cues of contamination, dirty hands covered with a substance described as being vomit and diarrhea, respectively. Experiment 3 also investigated the need for a fitness-relevant context for the mnemonic effect to occur. In all experiments, stimuli were presented individually on the screen with the "contamination cue." During encoding participants had to identify whether each object had been touched by a sick or a healthy person. The results of the final surprise free recall tasks replicated those previously reported: performance was enhanced for objects encoded as potential sources of contamination. Furthermore, the results of the last study reinstate the importance of fitness-relevance for the effect to occur. These results establish the generality of the contamination effect previously found, now using more ecologically-valid stimuli.

Highlights

  • To face threats posed by pathogens, natural selection designed the Behavioral Immune System, which orchestrates several responses aimed to prevent contact with pathogens

  • We asked whether people would remember neutral objects that had been touched by sick people better than when the same objects had been touched by healthy people (Fernandes et al, 2017)

  • In the previously presented Experiments, the potential for contamination had to be imagined by the participants because the object and potential source of contamination were presented without visible direct contact

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Summary

Introduction

To face threats posed by pathogens, natural selection designed the Behavioral Immune System, which orchestrates several responses aimed to prevent contact with pathogens. In our experiments everyone was asked to remember exactly the same “neutral” stimuli (which precludes item-selection concerns) but their fitness-relevance was manipulated by framing them as potentially contaminated or not (see Bell & Buchner, 2010). To our knowledge, these studies provided the first empirical evidence of a memory advantage for neutral stimuli that “acquired” the status of potential contaminants through proximity or brief contact with a source of pathogens (sick people)

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