Hansson L S, Tognetti A, Tavakoli-Berg E, Stache J M, Kakeeto M, Melin J, Bredin S, Skarp R, Lensmar C, Demand R, Olsson M J, Wilhelms D B, John R Toll, Jensen K B, Lekander M, Lasselin J
Department of Psychology, Division of Psychobiology and Epidemiology, Stress Research Institute, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden; Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Division of Psychology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; Osher Center for Integrative Health, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Division of Psychology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; CEE-M, University of Montpellier, CNRS, INRAE, Institut Agro, Montpellier, France.
Brain Behav Immun. 2025 Oct;129:399-408. doi: 10.1016/j.bbi.2025.06.013. Epub 2025 Jun 9.
Sick humans and other animals often withdraw from social interactions. It has been suggested that social withdrawal might enable avoidance of contagious individuals, but experimental evidence is lacking on how the state of sickness may affect perception of sick others. Here, we investigated if individuals were more likely to rate others as sick, while being sick themselves, compared to when healthy. Furthermore, we assessed whether the intensity of the fever response and sickness behavior would predict changes in sickness detection. Thirty-four participants were experimentally made sick using an intravenous injection of the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS condition; dose of 1.0 ng/kg body weight) and completed a sickness detection task during the peak of the inflammatory and sickness response. Participants performed the same task when they were healthy (control condition, n = 32), in a randomized order before or after the main study day. In the sickness detection task, participants watched photos of individuals' faces as well as video recordings of the same individuals walking, and rated the individual on each stimulus as sick or healthy. The photos and video recordings were obtained from twenty-two individuals who had participated in a previous study, and had been made sick with an intravenous injection of lipopolysaccharide (2.0 ng/kg body weight) on one occasion, and remained healthy after an intravenous injection of a placebo (0.9 % NaCl) on another occasion. Participants could detect sick individuals based on photos and walking patterns above chance level during both the LPS and the control condition. There was no significant difference in how often participants identified sick faces and sick walkers in the LPS condition - when they were sick themselves - compared to in the control condition. However, healthy walkers (but not healthy faces) were more often rated as sick by participants in the LPS condition compared to the control condition. Neither the fever response nor the intensity of sickness behavior predicted changes in sickness detection. The results do not indicate more accurate sickness detection in others during own sickness. Nevertheless, the data from walking patterns indicate that sick individuals may be more prone to categorize healthy individuals as sick. If replicated, this could in speculation be related to a need to reduce the risk of becoming infected while already fighting a pathogen.
患病的人类和其他动物常常会退出社交互动。有人认为社交退缩可能有助于避免接触有传染性的个体,但关于患病状态如何影响对患病他人的感知,目前还缺乏实验证据。在此,我们调查了与健康时相比,个体在自身患病时是否更有可能将他人评定为患病。此外,我们评估了发热反应和疾病行为的强度是否能预测疾病检测的变化。34名参与者通过静脉注射细菌内毒素脂多糖(脂多糖条件;剂量为1.0纳克/千克体重)被实验性地诱导患病,并在炎症和疾病反应的高峰期完成了一项疾病检测任务。参与者在健康时(对照条件,n = 32)也执行了相同的任务,在主要研究日之前或之后以随机顺序进行。在疾病检测任务中,参与者观看个体面部照片以及相同个体行走的视频记录,并将每个刺激中的个体评定为患病或健康。照片和视频记录来自22名曾参与先前研究的个体,他们曾有一次通过静脉注射脂多糖(2.0纳克/千克体重)而患病,另一次静脉注射安慰剂(0.9%氯化钠)后保持健康。在脂多糖条件和对照条件下,参与者都能基于照片和行走模式以高于随机水平的概率检测出患病个体。与对照条件相比,在脂多糖条件下——即他们自身患病时——参与者识别患病面部和患病行走者的频率没有显著差异。然而,与对照条件相比,脂多糖条件下的参与者更常将健康行走者(而非健康面部)评定为患病。发热反应和疾病行为的强度均未预测疾病检测的变化。结果并未表明在自身患病期间能更准确地检测他人的疾病。然而,来自行走模式的数据表明,患病个体可能更容易将健康个体归类为患病。如果得到重复验证,推测这可能与在已经感染病原体时降低再次感染风险的需求有关。