TY - JOUR KW - Adult KW - Analysis of Variance KW - Attitude to Health KW - Choice Behavior KW - Communicable Diseases KW - Cues KW - Female KW - Humans KW - Male KW - Prejudice KW - Social Desirability KW - Social Distance KW - Stereotyping KW - United Kingdom KW - Young Adult AU - Park J AU - Leeuwen F AU - Chochorelou Y AB -
An evolutionary approach to stigmatization suggests that disease-avoidance processes contribute to some instances of social exclusion. Disease-avoidance processes are over-inclusive, targeting even non-threatening individuals who display cues of substandard health. We investigated whether such cues motivate avoidance of physical contact in particular. In Studies 1 and 2, targets with disease (e.g., leprosy) or atypical morphologies (e.g., amputated leg, obesity) were found to arouse differentially heightened discomfort with physical (versus nonphysical) contact, whereas a criminal target (stigmatized for disease-irrelevant reasons) was found to arouse elevated discomfort for both types of contact. Study 3 used a between-subjects design that eliminated the influence of extraneous factors. A diseased target was found to arouse differentially heightened discomfort with physical (versus nonphysical) contact, and to do so more strongly than any other type of target.
BT - The Journal of social psychology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23484348?dopt=Abstract CN - PARK 2013 DA - 2013 Mar-Apr DO - 10.1080/00224545.2012.721812 IS - 2 J2 - J Soc Psychol LA - eng N2 -An evolutionary approach to stigmatization suggests that disease-avoidance processes contribute to some instances of social exclusion. Disease-avoidance processes are over-inclusive, targeting even non-threatening individuals who display cues of substandard health. We investigated whether such cues motivate avoidance of physical contact in particular. In Studies 1 and 2, targets with disease (e.g., leprosy) or atypical morphologies (e.g., amputated leg, obesity) were found to arouse differentially heightened discomfort with physical (versus nonphysical) contact, whereas a criminal target (stigmatized for disease-irrelevant reasons) was found to arouse elevated discomfort for both types of contact. Study 3 used a between-subjects design that eliminated the influence of extraneous factors. A diseased target was found to arouse differentially heightened discomfort with physical (versus nonphysical) contact, and to do so more strongly than any other type of target.
PY - 2013 SP - 212 EP - 28 T2 - The Journal of social psychology TI - Disease-avoidance processes and stigmatization: cues of substandard health arouse heightened discomfort with physical contact. VL - 153 SN - 0022-4545 ER -