Case Trevor I, Stevenson Richard J
School of Psychological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia.
Animals (Basel). 2024 Jan 15;14(2):264. doi: 10.3390/ani14020264.
The emotion of disgust in humans is widely considered to represent a continuation of the disease-avoidance behavior ubiquitous in animals. The extent to which analogs of human disgust are evident in nonhuman animals, however, remains unclear. The scant research explicitly investigating disgust in animals has predominantly focused on great apes and suggests that disgust might be present in a highly muted form. In this review, we outline the main approaches to disgust. We then briefly discuss disease-avoidance behavior in nonhuman animals, proposing a set of criteria against which evidence for the presence or absence of disgust in animals can be evaluated. The resultant decision tree takes into account other plausible causes of avoidance and aversion when evaluating whether it is likely that the behavior represents disgust. We apply this decision tree to evaluate evidence of disgust-like behavior (e.g., avoidance of carrion and avoidance of feces-contaminated food) in several examples, including nonhuman great apes. Finally, we consider the large disparity between disgust in humans compared to muted disgust in other great apes, examining the possibility that heightened disgust in humans is a relatively recent cultural acquisition.
人类的厌恶情绪被广泛认为是动物中普遍存在的疾病规避行为的延续。然而,非人类动物中人类厌恶情绪的类似表现程度仍不明确。对动物厌恶情绪进行明确研究的少量研究主要集中在大猩猩身上,表明厌恶情绪可能以一种非常微弱的形式存在。在这篇综述中,我们概述了研究厌恶情绪的主要方法。然后我们简要讨论了非人类动物的疾病规避行为,提出了一套标准,据此可以评估动物中厌恶情绪存在与否的证据。由此产生的决策树在评估行为是否可能代表厌恶情绪时,考虑了其他合理的回避和厌恶原因。我们应用这个决策树来评估几个例子中类似厌恶行为的证据(例如,对腐肉的回避和对粪便污染食物的回避),包括非人类大猩猩。最后,我们考虑了人类的厌恶情绪与其他大猩猩微弱的厌恶情绪之间的巨大差异,探讨了人类强烈的厌恶情绪是相对较新的文化习得的可能性。