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Behavioral and physiological sensitivity to natural sick faces.

Authors :
Leung, Tiffany S.
Maylott, Sarah E.
Zeng, Guangyu
Nascimben, Diana N.
Jakobsen, Krisztina V.
Simpson, Elizabeth A.
Source :
Brain, Behavior & Immunity. May2023, Vol. 110, p195-211. 17p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• People detect subtle facial cues of natural, acute illness. • Sick faces are rated as less healthy, more dangerous, and more likely to be avoided. • Shorter looks and more pupil dilation to sick faces suggest threat detection. • Behaviors correlate with face health suggesting fine-tuned sensitivity. • The eyes–which received the greatest differential attention–may provide health cues. The capacity to rapidly detect and avoid sick people may be adaptive. Given that faces are reliably available, as well as rapidly detected and processed, they may provide health information that influences social interaction. Prior studies used faces that were manipulated to appear sick (e.g., editing photos, inducing inflammatory response); however, responses to naturally sick faces remain largely unexplored. We tested whether adults detected subtle cues of genuine, acute, potentially contagious illness in face photos compared to the same individuals when healthy. We tracked illness symptoms and severity with the Sickness Questionnaire and Common Cold Questionnaire. We also checked that sick and healthy photos were matched on low-level features. We found that participants (N = 109) rated sick faces, compared to healthy faces, as sicker, more dangerous, and eliciting more unpleasant feelings. Participants (N = 90) rated sick faces as more likely to be avoided, more tired, and more negative in expression than healthy faces. In a passive-viewing eye-tracking task, participants (N = 50) looked longer at healthy than sick faces, especially the eye region, suggesting people may be more drawn to healthy conspecifics. When making approach-avoidance decisions, participants (N = 112) had greater pupil dilation to sick than healthy faces, and more pupil dilation was associated with greater avoidance, suggesting elevated arousal to threat. Across all experiments, participants' behaviors correlated with the degree of sickness, as reported by the face donors, suggesting a nuanced, fine-tuned sensitivity. Together, these findings suggest that humans may detect subtle threats of contagion from sick faces, which may facilitate illness avoidance. By better understanding how humans naturally avoid illness in conspecifics, we may identify what information is used and ultimately improve public health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08891591
Volume :
110
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Brain, Behavior & Immunity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163046752
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2023.03.007