Investigating Behaviour and Face Encoding in a Hypothetical Real-World Social Contract: Handwashing in Hazardous Health Settings


Autoria(s): Felisberti, F.M.; Farrelly, Daniel
Data(s)

01/09/2016

Resumo

Investigations into the evolutionary origins of human cognition has shown that individuals’ memory for others is influenced by the latter’s behaviour in social contracts. Such research is primarily based on hypothetical or more abstract forms of social contracts, whereas an application of this knowledge to everyday health behaviours can be of great value. To address this, the current study investigated whether participants who were asked to imagine themselves in a hypothetical hazardous health scenario showed differential response sensitivity (d’) and latency (RT) to faces of hospital staff tagged with contrasting hand hygiene before touching patients: clean hands, dirty hands, or unknown hand-washing behaviour (control). The test used a two alternative forced-choice (2AFC: “old/new”) face recognition paradigm. The findings showed that d’ to dirty and clean hands was similar, but higher than for controls. Moreover, d’ was not affected by the occupation of hospital staff (nurses vs porters). The absence of memory gains towards clean or dirty hands points to the need for new strategies to remind patients to observe (and remember) the hand hygiene of others when exposed to hazardous health environments.

Formato

text

Identificador

http://eprints.worc.ac.uk/4459/1/Felisberti%2C%20F.%20M.%2C%20%26%20Farrelly%2C%20D.%20%282016%29.pdf

Felisberti, F.M. and Farrelly, Daniel (2016) Investigating Behaviour and Face Encoding in a Hypothetical Real-World Social Contract: Handwashing in Hazardous Health Settings. Evolutionary Psychological Science, 2 (3). pp. 207-213. ISSN Online: 2198-9885

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Springer International Publishing

Relação

http://eprints.worc.ac.uk/4459/

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40806-016-0055-7

10.1007/s40806-016-0055-7

Direitos

cc_by_nc_nd

Palavras-Chave #BF Psychology
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed