Lund Erik M, Boggero Ian A
of Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA..
Evol Psychol. 2014 Jul 23;12(4):706-18. doi: 10.1177/147470491401200403.
Biases against the mentally ill are historically and cross-culturally pervasive, suggesting they may have an evolutionary basis. The prevailing view is that people seek to distance themselves from the mentally ill because they are perceived as dangerous, violent, and incompetent. However, because of similarities between sickness behaviors and symptoms of some mental disorders, it was hypothesized that mental illness stigma could be partially explained as a function of behavioral immune system biases designed to avoid potential sources of contagion. In two experiments, it was found that mental illness was implicitly associated more with disease than danger. In Experiment 1, this implicit association was exacerbated among people who have had their biological immune system activated by a recent illness. In Experiment 2, experimentally priming disease salience increased implicit association between mental illness and disease. Implications for the evolutionary origins of prejudice and the prevention of mental illness stigma are discussed.
对精神疾病患者的偏见在历史上和跨文化环境中都普遍存在,这表明它们可能有进化基础。普遍的观点是,人们试图与精神疾病患者保持距离,因为他们被视为危险、暴力和无能力的。然而,由于疾病行为与某些精神障碍症状之间存在相似性,有人提出精神疾病污名化可以部分解释为行为免疫系统偏见的一种作用,这种偏见旨在避免潜在的传染源。在两项实验中,发现精神疾病与疾病的隐性关联比与危险的关联更强。在实验1中,这种隐性关联在近期疾病激活了其生物免疫系统的人群中更为明显。在实验2中,通过实验启动疾病显著性增加了精神疾病与疾病之间的隐性关联。本文讨论了对偏见的进化起源以及精神疾病污名化预防的启示。