Publication | Closed Access
Cuteness and Disgust: The Humanizing and Dehumanizing Effects of Emotion
266
Citations
33
References
2011
Year
Affective NeuroscienceEducationPsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseAffective ScienceCute EntitiesEmotion RegulationSocial-emotional DevelopmentDehumanizing EffectsCute ThingsCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesMoral EmotionsSocial CognitionSocial BehaviorHuman Behavior (Behavioral Psychology)Emotional DevelopmentEmotionEmotion Recognition
Moral emotions are evolved mechanisms that function in part to optimize social relationships. We discuss two moral emotions— disgust and the “cuteness response”—which modulate social-engagement motives in opposite directions, changing the degree to which the eliciting entity is imbued with mental states (i.e., mentalized). Disgust-inducing entities are hypo-mentalized (i.e., dehumanized); cute entities are hyper-mentalized (i.e., “humanized”). This view of cuteness—which challenges the prevailing view that cuteness is a releaser of parental instincts (Lorenz, 1950/1971)—explains (a) the broad range of affiliative behaviors elicited by cuteness, (b) the marketing of cuteness to children (by toy makers and animators) to elicit play, and (c) the apparent ease and frequency with which cute things are anthropomorphized.
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