Behavioral Immune Trade-Offs: Interpersonal Value Relaxes Social Pathogen Avoidance
infectious disease
05 social sciences
disgust
open data
behavioral immune system
Communicable Diseases
open materials
preregistered
3. Good health
Psychological Science in the Public Eye
SDG 17 - Partnerships for the Goals
welfare trade-offs
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Cues
Social Behavior
evolutionary psychology
DOI:
10.1177/0956797620960011
Publication Date:
2020-09-18T00:28:15Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Behavioral-immune-system research has illuminated how people detect and avoid signs of infectious disease. But how do we regulate exposure to pathogens that produce no symptoms in their hosts? This research tested the proposition that estimates of interpersonal value are used for this task. The results of three studies ( N = 1,694), each conducted using U.S. samples, are consistent with this proposition: People are less averse to engaging in infection-risky acts not only with friends relative to foes but also with honest and agreeable strangers relative to dishonest and disagreeable ones. Further, a continuous measure of how much a person values a target covaries with comfort with infection-risky acts with that target, even within relationship categories. Findings indicate that social prophylactic motivations arise not only from cues to infectiousness but also from interpersonal value. Consequently, pathogen transmission within social networks might be exacerbated by relaxed contamination aversions with highly valued social partners.
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