A Pox on the Mind: Disjunction of Attention and Memory in Processing Physical Disfigurement

The unfavorable treatment of people with physical disfigurements is well-documented, yet little is known about basic perceptual and cognitive responses to disfigurement. Here, we identify a specialized pattern of cognitive processing consistent with the hypothesis that disfigurements act as heuristi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ackerman, Joshua, Vaughn Becker, D., Mortensen, Chad R., Sasaki, Takao, Neuberg, Steven L., Kenrick, Douglas T.
Other Authors: Sloan School of Management
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: American Psychological Association (APA) 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/74579
Description
Summary:The unfavorable treatment of people with physical disfigurements is well-documented, yet little is known about basic perceptual and cognitive responses to disfigurement. Here, we identify a specialized pattern of cognitive processing consistent with the hypothesis that disfigurements act as heuristic cues to contagious disease. Disfigurements are often invariant across time and difficult to conceal, and thus observers can detect the presence of such cues without necessarily remembering the particular individuals bearing these cues. Indeed, despite the fact that disfigured faces were especially likely to hold disease-sensitive perceivers’ attention (Study 1), disfigured individuals were often confused with one another and thus not well remembered later (Study 2), revealing a disjunction of the typical relationship between elevated attention and elevated memory. We discuss the implications of our results for stigmatization of people with and without physical abnormalities and suggest the possibility that cognitive mechanisms for processing social information may be functionally tuned to the variant nature of important cues.