Pseudo‑Contamination and Memory: Is There a Memory Advantage for Objects Touched by “Morphologically Deviant People”?

Category

Journal Article

Authors

Gaëtan Thiebaut, Alain Méot, Arnaud Witt, Pavol Prokop, Patrick Bonin

Year

2022

Title

Pseudo‑Contamination and Memory: Is There a Memory Advantage for Objects Touched by “Morphologically Deviant People”?

Journal / book / conference

Evolutionary Psychological Science

Abstract

Memory plays an important role in the behavioral immune system (BIS; Schaller in The Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology
(2nd Edition), Vol. 1, (pp. 206-224). New York: Wiley, 2016), a proactive immune system whose ultimate function is
to make organisms avoid sources of contamination. Indeed, it has been found that objects presented next to sick people are
remembered better than objects shown next to healthy people—representing a contamination effect in memory. In the present
studies, we investigated this memory effect in relation to “pseudo-contaminated” sources, that is to say, people exhibiting
cues ultimately evoking the threat of contamination but objectively posing no such threat in terms of disease transmission.
Common objects were shown next to photographs of people having three kinds of morphological deviations—obesity (study
1), scars and burns (study 2), strange eyes (study 3)—or no morphological deviation. Contrary to our expectations, we found
that “pseudo-contaminated objects” were not remembered better than “non-contaminated objects,” whereas discomfort ratings
of the idea of touching the same objects were clearly higher with morphologically deviant people. Memory mechanisms do
not seem to be mobilized by “pseudo-contamination” sources which are not directly related to infection risk.

Keywords

Pseudo-contamination · Pathogens · Adaptive memory · Contamination · Behavioral immune system · Disgust

relative links

  • https://doi.org/10.1007/s40806-022-00345-w

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