Article

Hormonal correlates of pathogen disgust: Testing the Compensatory Prophylaxis Hypothesis

Details

Citation

Jones B, Hahn A, Fisher C, Wang H, Kandrik M, Lee AJ, Tybur J & DeBruine L (2018) Hormonal correlates of pathogen disgust: Testing the Compensatory Prophylaxis Hypothesis. Evolution and Human Behavior, 39 (2), pp. 166-169. https://doi.org/10.1101/156430

Abstract
Raised progesterone during the menstrual cycle is associated with suppressed physiological immune responses, reducing the probability that the immune system will compromise the blastocyst's development. The Compensatory Prophylaxis Hypothesis proposes that this progesterone-linked immunosuppression triggers increased disgust responses to pathogen cues, compensating for the reduction in physiological immune responses by minimizing contact with pathogens. Although a popular and influential hypothesis, there is no direct, within-woman evidence for correlated changes in progesterone and pathogen disgust. To address this issue, we used a longitudinal design to test for correlated changes in salivary progesterone and pathogen disgust (measured using the pathogen disgust subscale of the Three Domain Disgust Scale) in a large sample of women (N = 375). Our analyses showed no evidence that pathogen disgust tracked changes in progesterone, estradiol, testosterone, or cortisol. Thus, our results provide no support for the Compensatory Prophylaxis Hypothesis of variation in pathogen disgust.

Journal
Evolution and Human Behavior: Volume 39, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersEuropean Commission
Publication date31/03/2018
Publication date online19/12/2017
Date accepted by journal12/12/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28594
PublisherCold Spring Harbor Laboratory
ISSN1090-5138

People (1)

Dr Anthony Lee

Dr Anthony Lee

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology