Thornhill Randy, Fincher Corey L, Murray Damian R, Schaller Mark
Department of Biology, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Evol Psychol. 2010 Apr 11;8(2):151-69. doi: 10.1177/147470491000800201.
The parasite-stress model of human sociality proposes that humans' ontogenetic experiences with infectious diseases as well as their evolutionary historical interactions with these diseases exert causal influences on human psychology and social behavior. This model has been supported by cross-national relationships between parasite prevalence and human personality traits, and between parasite prevalence and societal values. Importantly, the parasite-stress model emphasizes the causal role of non-zoonotic parasites (which have the capacity for human-to-human transmission), rather than zoonotic parasites (which do not), but previous studies failed to distinguish between these conceptually distinct categories. The present investigation directly tested the differential predictive effects of zoonotic and non-zoonotic (both human-specific and multihost) parasite prevalence on personality traits and societal values. Supporting the parasite-stress model, cross-national differences in personality traits (unrestricted sexuality, extraversion, openness to experiences) and in societal values (individualism, collectivism, gender equality, democratization) are predicted specifically by non-zoonotic parasite prevalence.
人类社会性的寄生虫压力模型提出,人类在个体发育过程中与传染病的经历以及他们在进化历史上与这些疾病的相互作用,对人类心理和社会行为产生因果影响。这一模型得到了寄生虫流行率与人类性格特征之间以及寄生虫流行率与社会价值观之间跨国关系的支持。重要的是,寄生虫压力模型强调非人畜共患寄生虫(具有人际传播能力)而非人畜共患寄生虫(不具有人际传播能力)的因果作用,但先前的研究未能区分这两个概念上不同的类别。本研究直接测试了人畜共患和非人畜共患(包括人类特异性和多宿主)寄生虫流行率对性格特征和社会价值观的不同预测作用。支持寄生虫压力模型的是,性格特征(无限制的性观念、外向性、经验开放性)和社会价值观(个人主义、集体主义、性别平等、民主化)的跨国差异具体由非人畜共患寄生虫的流行率预测。