Understanding disgust
β Scribed by Hanah A. Chapman; Adam K. Anderson
- Book ID
- 114883617
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 630 KB
- Volume
- 1251
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0890-6564
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Disgust is characterized by a remarkably diverse set of stimulus triggers, ranging from extremely concrete (bad tastes and disease vectors) to extremely abstract (moral transgressions and those who commit them). This diversity may reflect an expansion of the role of disgust over evolutionary time, from an origin in defending the body against toxicity and disease, through defense against other threats to biological fitness (e.g., incest), to involvement in the selection of suitable interaction partners, by motivating the rejection of individuals who violate social and moral norms. The anterior insula, and to a lesser extent the basal ganglia, are implicated in toxicityβ and diseaseβrelated forms of disgust, although we argue that insular activation is not exclusive to disgust. It remains unclear whether moral disgust is associated with insular activity. Disgust offers cognitive neuroscientists a unique opportunity to study how an evolutionarily ancient response rooted in the chemical senses has expanded into a uniquely human social cognitive domain; many interesting research avenues remain to be explored.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
I have recently got into disgust in a big way. People often look surprised when I tell them this, even bemused, but they're usually not a little intrigued at the same time. However, not only is disgust a legitimate area of serious academic research (well, that's what I tell my professor), but you ca