4.7 Article

Human sickness detection is not dependent on cultural experience

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0922

Keywords

hunter-gatherer; cross-cultural; infectious disease; facial sickness detection; disease avoidance; out-group

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) Vici grant [277-70-011]
  2. Ammodo KNAW Award
  3. Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences Grant [NHS14-1665:1, P12-1017]
  4. Swedish Research Council [2012-1125, 2016-02742, 2018-01603]
  5. Stockholm Stress Center [2009-01758]
  6. Forte [2018-01603] Funding Source: Forte
  7. Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences [NHS14-1665:1] Funding Source: Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences
  8. Swedish Research Council [2018-01603] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Animals can detect early infection cues, reducing contamination risk. Humans, regardless of cultural background, can detect signals of illness. The study shows that different cultures can recognize immune response signals to help detect infectious threats.
Animals across phyla can detect early cues of infection in conspecifics, thereby reducing the risk of contamination. It is unknown, however, if humans can detect cues of sickness in people belonging to communities with whom they have limited or no experience. To test this, we presented Western faces photographed 2 h after the experimental induction of an acute immune response to one Western and five non-Western communities, including small-scale hunter-gatherer and large urban-dwelling communities. All communities could detect sick individuals. There were group differences in performance but Western participants, who observed faces from their own community, were not systematically better than all non-Western participants. At odds with the common belief that sickness detection of an out-group member should be biased to err on the side of caution, the majority of non-Western communities were unbiased. Our results show that subtle cues of a general immune response are recognized across cultures and may aid in detecting infectious threats.

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