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Evolved Disease-Avoidance Mechanisms and Contemporary Xenophobic Attitudes
847
Citations
41
References
2004
Year
XenoracismSocial PsychologyEducationGenetic FoundationSocial SciencesPsychologyDisease SusceptibilityPublic HealthSocial IdentityForeign PeoplesGenetic FactorApplied Social PsychologyContemporary Xenophobic AttitudesSocial CognitionXenophobic AttitudesEvolutionary Psychological ReasoningGlobal HealthSocial BehaviorCross-cultural PerspectiveCultural Psychology
From evolutionary psychological reasoning, we derived the hypothesis that chronic and contextually aroused feelings of vulnerability to disease motivate negative reactions to foreign peoples. The hypothesis was tested and supported across four correlational studies: chronic disease worries predicted implicit cognitions associating foreign outgroups with danger, and also predicted less positive attitudes toward foreign (but not familiar) immigrant groups. The hypothesis also received support in two experiments in which the salience of contagious disease was manipulated: participants under high disease-salience conditions expressed less positive attitudes toward foreign (but not familiar) immigrants and were more likely to endorse policies that would favor the immigration of familiar rather than foreign peoples. These results reveal a previously under-explored influence on xenophobic attitudes, and suggest interesting linkages between evolved disease-avoidance mechanisms and contemporary social cognition.
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