Parents Develop Long‐Term Disgust Habituation, but Only After Beginning to Wean Their Children

Yifan Huang, Ivo E. Dalmaijer‐Denning, Joris A. Dalmaijer‐Denning, Thomas Armstrong, Edwin S. Dalmaijer*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

Disgust helps humans avoid potentially pathogenic substances such as bodily effluvia. This reduces illness risks and is difficult to overcome with cognitive strategies or through short-term habituation (minutes to hours). Whether long-term habituation (months to years) exists is an unsolved question. While regular professional exposure to disgust elicitors is associated with lower disgust sensitivity and avoidance, this could reflect selection and survivorship bias. We use the natural quasi-experiment of parenthood: it greatly increases exposure to bodily effluvia, but disgust does not usually inspire individuals to start or stop being a parent. Parents (N = 99) and controls (N = 50) completed self-report and behavioral avoidance measures. We used parent-specific items in disgust-sensitivity questionnaires, and child-related stimuli (soiled diapers) in a preferential-looking task. These included diapers with pre-weaning (yellow and runny) or post-weaning feces (adult-like). While the control group showed the expected behavioral avoidance, parents of weaning or weaned children showed almost no avoidance of stimuli depicting child-related or general bodily effluvia. These results suggest that parents habituated to disgust induced by feces in diapers, and that this had generalized to other bodily effluvia. Contrary to our expectations, parents of pre-weaning children showed similar disgust avoidance to the control group, even if they had older children. This could point to an adaptive response to reduce the risk of illness in young infants. After the sensitive milk-feeding stage, continuous exposure to their children's bodily effluvia inoculates parents to disgust.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages14
JournalScandinavian Journal of Psychology
Early online date6 Jan 2026
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 6 Jan 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s).

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Parents Develop Long‐Term Disgust Habituation, but Only After Beginning to Wean Their Children'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this