Speaking of Psychology - Yuck! What disgusts us and why, with Paul Rozin, PhD
Episode Date: February 19, 2025“Disgusting” is a flexible word – it could describe everything from a putrid smell to your least-favorite food to a behavior you find immoral. But what does it really mean to be disgusted? Paul ...Rozin, PhD, talks about where disgust comes from, why some people are more easily disgusted than others, universal triggers of disgust, why the foods we consider disgusting vary by culture, why is gross-out humor can be funny, and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What's the last really gross thing you encountered?
Was it a cockroach?
A dirty diaper?
Yesterday's smelly garbage?
Most of us are lucky if we go a single day without encountering something we find at least a little revolting.
But what does it mean to call something disgusting?
The word can describe everything from a putrid smell to our least favorite food to the word moist.
Over the past several decades, psychologists have begun to dig into the concept of,
disgust, exploring where it comes from, and how many things it can stretch to encompass.
So why do we feel disgust? Why are some people more easily disgusted than others?
Are babies born with the ability to feel disgust, or does it develop later in life? Is there
anything that all humans find disgusting? Why do the foods that we consider disgusting vary so much
by culture or even by individual? Why is gross humor funny, at least to some people? And how might
understanding disgust help us address some important public health issues.
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life. I'm Kim Mills.
My guest today is Dr. Paul Rosen, a professor emeritus of psychology at the University of
Pennsylvania and one of the world's leading experts on the psychology of disgust. He's been
studying disgust in its many forms since the 1960s. His research has touched on human food
choice, the development of food aversions, attitudes toward meat, how disgust carries over to morality,
attitudes toward recycled water, and much more. Dr. Rosen has published hundreds of scientific
papers and has won many awards for his work, including the American Psychological Association's
Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award for 2007.
Dr. Rossin, thank you for joining me today.
Pleasure to be here.
Now, before we dig too deeply into some really revolting topics, I want to warn our listeners
that we might talk about some things that will gross them out.
So if you have a weak stomach, maybe this isn't the episode for you, and you can come
back next week.
That being said, Dr. Razum, where does disgust come from?
Why did we evolve to feel this unpleasant emotion?
We're not really 100% certain how disgust originated in human evolution.
It seems to be uniquely human, and it's quite clear that it serves a function, which is to keep us away from microbes, dangerous microbes.
Whether that's the reason it was originally adopted, we don't know.
Now, are babies born with the ability to feel disgust, or does it develop later in childhood?
Well, disgust is not innate, not present at birth.
little infants have an innate aversion to bitter tastes and other tastes.
And the face that they make to that is similar to the face that we make to disgust.
But disgust doesn't appear until maybe three to five years of age.
And what are the things that kids at that age are disgusted by?
Is there any pattern?
You know, it's surprisingly we don't know that well.
And the reason is that feces is the universal disgust.
It's probably true that toilet training is the experience which makes children their first
disgust, which is species.
But I think it's because toilet training is itself disgusting that most people don't study
it.
So there's very little research on toilet training and what actually happens between the mother
and the child and the re-dipering and all of this that communicates to the child what a terrible
thing this is.
You know, there are some things that are gross to other people, but not to ourselves.
For instance, I would venture to say that most people don't find their own poop as disgusting as other people do.
People pop their own zits, but if they see somebody else do it, they're going to vomit.
It's like, yuck.
What is the reason for that?
We don't really know.
Now, it's true that your own poop or your own zet, any of your own body waste is less dangerous to you than to other people because you already got that stuff.
in you. So that's a functional reason why you might not be as upset about your own body
waste as others. And of course, you're living with it. You know, you've got a colon filled with
feces and you've got a mouth filled with spit and you sort of live with it. But even then,
most people will not drink a glass of water if they spit into it first. So that was something of
their own. But as soon as it's out of their body, it's disgusting. Is disgust in emotion,
Is it a physical sensation? Is it both?
Well, it is generally considered one of the basic emotions,
and that's because it has the features of emotions.
It has a facial expression, which you're all familiar with.
It has a physiological presentation, which is nausea,
and it has a behavior which is withdrawal from the source of disgust.
That's like fear or anger or other emotions,
and it has some sort of appraisal.
That's the other feature of an emotion.
That is so you have to, your mind has to appreciate what it is that's causing it.
You said earlier that there's one thing that's universally disgusting and that's feces.
Is that the only thing that's universally disgusting to humans?
Well, nobody has, again, looked at this carefully across cultures.
So it's conceivable that, for example, vomit is also a universal disgust.
By the way, one of the important things about disgust is that little infants don't find anything discussed.
They don't find feces disgusting.
In fact, one function of diapers is to keep them from eating it.
And so until toilet training there, they don't seem to have any issue with body
weights.
So I think that there are probably other body waists that might be discussed.
They could probably vomit as one of them.
I don't know that anyone's actually looked at that, believe it or not.
You mentioned bodily fluids.
I mean, some people, and I'm one of them, will faint at the sight of a lot of blood.
Can you overcome that sort of disgust?
Well, in general, you can overcome any disgust, including feces.
But the main reason you do that is because you're exposed to it enough.
For example, we've shown that medical students who dissect the cadaver in their medical training
originally are very disgusted by the cadaver, but they get used to it.
People get used to things that are disgusting that are in their lives all the time.
And perhaps one reason you get used to your own feces and saliva less disgusting is that you live with it, you get used to it.
So people get accustomed to anything, not just disgust, anything, if you expose them often enough, except maybe extreme pain.
You mentioned before that humans seem to be the only animals that feel disgust.
And I mean, I know, like I walk my dog this morning and I have to watch her because she will eat her own feces and she'll sniff other dogs.
butts, they'll sniff hers. You know, they are really into all of that. What about like our closest
relatives chimps do they experience disgust or will they do the same thing as, say, my dog?
We don't know absolutely for sure, but many primates eat their feces. So that's a start,
which would be like human infants, of course. The other thing is there's one feature of disgust that
as far as we know no other animal shows. And that is what we call contamination. There's something
disgusting touches an edible food.
It renders it inedible.
So you think about a cockroach touches your favorite juice, drops in your favorite juice.
That's the end of the juice, right?
You won't need it.
Now, there's no evidence that any animal shows anything like that.
So it's a very potent thing about disgust.
It can take a pile of delicious food and spoil it with one touch of feces or a cockroach or something.
By the way, there's no opposite to disgust.
If you take a pile of cockroaches, there's nothing you can touch to it to make it good to eat.
So it's just the opposite. The disgust is very potent and very negative, and there's no positive
equivalent. But I thought I've heard you say that, for example, say Hitler had a sweater.
I mean, people wouldn't touch Hitler's sweater because it was contaminated by belonging to him.
And no matter what you did, no matter how many times you cleaned it, it's still contaminated,
unless, say, Mother Teresa wears it, right? Have you found that?
Yes. We found that for most people. And it's,
That's what's called positive contamination when Mother Teresa or your favorite rock star or something
wears something, it becomes more valuable.
But it's weaker than the negative.
So no one wants to wear Hitler's sweater, but many people don't care about having the sweater
of somebody who's a hero of theirs, and the hero is less potent than the evil person.
But you can't overwhelm it with enough exposure up to the positive person.
We call this negativity dominance, that negative things in general are stronger than positive things.
Now, you've done a lot of work around the idea of meat being disgusting.
Can we talk about that?
I mean, why is meat disgusting as much as we eat a lot of it?
Yeah, actually, the question in a way to me really is why do we eat any meat?
Because we are, in fact, say, take Americans, we eat cow, pig, maybe lamb, okay,
that out of 4,000 mammals, we eat three.
And we don't eat most of them.
We only eat their muscle.
Most people won't eat their liver.
Nobody eats their eyeballs.
In fact, we reject almost all the meat in the world and consider it disgusting.
And there's a small subset which we come to love.
So the question really is not why do we find meat disgusting, but rather why do we find
a small set of meats very attractive?
And do you have not found the answer to that?
No, but it is clear that little children, when they start eating meat, don't know where it comes from.
I mean, what's disgusting about a piece of meat is that it's a piece of an animal.
It's an animal that we generally find disgusting.
So it takes a while for kids to realize that this red stuff that they get from the supermarket and cook up is actually a piece of a pig or a cow.
In fact, my son, when he was about six years old, was eating chicken at the table,
which, by the way, has the name chicken.
To help her, you think that this is actually from a chicken.
And he suddenly said, my God, this is a piece of chicken.
I mean, he made that discovery.
Now, it's interesting that we don't name most meats by the animal they're from.
In Spanish, you say beef is a meat of cow.
That's the word for it.
But in the English, we say beef, which is not cow.
We don't say we're eating cow.
We don't say we're eating pig.
So that one way of making, distancing from ourselves
when the fact that we're eating a piece of what was once a living animal is to change the name.
And what about things that are more culturally specific when it comes to food?
Why don't we all find the same foods disgusting across cultures and nationalities?
Almost all disgusting things are animal products.
first of all. Very few people are disgusted by asparagus. They may not like it, but they don't
call it disgusting. Many Indians are put off by meat. There are hundreds of millions of them
are vegetarians. So there is variation within culture for sure. One issue is that certain
disgusting things become very desirable. So for example, in the United States, many people,
not all likes smelly cheese, which is rotten milk.
And that's pretty, that has the smell of disgust.
The decay smell is the smell of disgust.
That's the quintessential disgusting smell.
And other people from other cultures can't believe we eat that.
But on the other hand, in Southeast Asia, most of their food is seasoned with fermented
fish sauce, which smells rotten, and they love that.
And most of that, many other people can't.
imagine why they'd eat that or rotten eggs or even high meat.
So cultures take a very small subset of all the foods they can eat,
and they actually make them rotten and disgusting to most people.
Little kids will eat them, of course, babies because they don't know about disgust yet.
Kids have to learn to like those things.
After they've learned not to eat feces and anything that smells like that,
we say, well, whoa, whoa, this cheese is a little bit like that, but, you know, it's great.
So if you become an adult, then it becomes that much harder to eat something like marmite, for example, which I think is disgusting.
Marmite or vegamite, they're both the same thing.
They're not animal products.
The question is whether you will, let's take a food that you really like and put a little drop of marmite.
You won't taste it, tiny amount.
When you eat it, people will say, sure, it's not like a cockroach.
So it doesn't have that disgust quality to it.
And almost everything that has that quality is an animal product.
And animals are, of course, are highly nutritious, highly favorite food.
And we've gone to great difficulty, to disguise that, particularly in the United States.
In Europe, you know, you'll see in the market animal carcasses hanging up,
or the fur will be on rabbit meat when they sell it.
But in the United States, we wrap it in plastic.
You don't have any idea where it's from.
We don't do that with fish.
you can buy a whole fish very easily.
And some people are put off by that.
And if you share them a whole fish in a restaurant, they'll be put off.
But other people have no trouble with that.
As I say, we get used to discuss.
How wide is the range of disgust sensitivity?
Why are some people so much more easily disgusted than others?
First of all, there is an enormous range.
Let me just give you an example.
Some people will have no trouble eating rotten things
and any kind of meat, raw meat, things like that.
And they're not upset about body waste.
They don't like them, but they don't get upset about it.
Other people, for example, would not blow their nose
in a brand new piece of toilet paper,
which is pretty sensitive, right?
So you have this enormous range of sensitivity discussed.
But we don't know why this is true.
We can see there's some genetic component,
in some early environment, but a lot of the variation we say can't be explained in anything
and liking dogs and what kinds of things that people do.
Might it be that somebody has a more acute sense of smell and taste and that that person
would be more easily disgusted?
Has that been looked at?
There's no evidence that that's true.
Just as you wouldn't say that an artist like Picasso, did Picasso have very good eyesight?
Probably not.
And this is the same thing with disgusted.
You might be able to detect a decay odor in the refrigerator, say, more rapidly than
anyone else.
But whether it bothers you or not is another matter.
It's not the detection.
It's how much it upsets you.
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In many ways, it feels like we're more removed from disgusting things today than we used to be.
I mean, we have indoor plumbing and we don't have to, most of us don't have to kill our own food.
Do you think that we have a lower disgust tolerance as a species as a result of this?
it's probably true that we've been protected from disgusting things.
On the other hand, you could say, if you're exposed to a lot of disgust early,
you might get more tolerance of it.
So there's every reason to believe that we've had less experience with disgusting things
than people a hundred years ago.
No question because of all things you mentioned, the plumbing and so on.
But the question is whether that makes you more or less sensitive to discuss is another question.
because you can become adapted to it or you can become sensitized to it.
We don't know, those are two opposite processes.
When you're exposed to something like with an allergen, you get sensitized to it.
Right.
The exposure makes you more sense.
There are lots of things that we learn to pay no attention to because we get adapted to them.
So you can't always tell when someone's exposed to something,
whether they're going to be traumatized or they're going to be traumatized or they're going to
to get used to it.
Now, what got you interested in the topic to begin with, and why have you stuck with it for so many years?
I was working on human food choice, starting in the late 1970s, but I wasn't working on disgust.
One of the things I got interested in was meat, because it's such a favorite food of man, of humans.
And then I discovered that, isn't it interesting, that almost all the taboos of food are about animal products.
And then I started looking at that
and I realized that many of the taboos
were associated with disgust
but people didn't want to, they got nauseous
and thinking about them.
They didn't want to have anything to do with them.
They'd get upset up.
Other people were eating them in their presence.
Nobody who hates asparagus
has a problem with the person
across the table eating asparagus.
So this was a very powerful thing.
And I realized it was one of the most powerful reactions
that people have to anything,
not just food.
It's so powerful, as I said, that if it touches something you love, it spoils it.
So that's what got me into the disgust.
It was starting out with meat.
The fact that we experienced disgust as much as universally as we do, I think, could be deleterious to us going forward in terms of water.
I mean, we are in a situation where at some point in the not too distant future, they're going to be parts of the country and if not the world where people don't have enough water.
And yet, it's very easy to recycle human waste.
I mean, we can recycle human waste within seconds and make it drinkable.
Why is that such a difficult thing to overcome?
I mean, in fact, aren't we all essentially drinking dinosaur pee anyway?
Well, one of my colleagues calculated for me, a geologist, that everyone in Europe who takes
a glass of water are drinking a few molecules that went through Adolf Hitler.
Now, Adolf Hitler is a great contaminant.
People don't want anything to do with it.
So what happens is all of our water that we drink is contaminated
because it's been in toilets and all sorts of things.
And yeah, it goes down streams and it gets processed.
But there's still molecules of water in there that were in very bad place.
So we get used to that.
We just don't think about it.
Now, if you happen to go to visit a sewer plant,
it might put you off for a while because you have in your mind the origin of the water.
But of course, it's very important to drink water.
and if we were put off by disgusted water,
we would be in very bad shape.
So what we do is we don't think about it,
but the movement to purify water,
to solve the water problem by taking fouled water
and reprocessing it into pure water.
It's safe of water than the water that comes into your faucet now.
People are very put off by it because that's a bad image,
and they think of it that way.
They think it reminds them that water is sewage process.
Now, Singapore has been a leader in this area because they are short of water and they've had to recycle water.
And what they've done is a very good job of convincing people that it's okay.
They have a facility of water purification facility that you can visit.
You can get bottles of bott, you can get bottled water made from it.
They'll provide it to you for your parties and so on.
It tastes fine, of course.
And they've done a good job of selling it,
and they mix it with their groundwater.
They don't actually go right from the purification.
They don't have enough groundwater, but they have some.
So they've done a good job of selling it,
and in Southern California where there's a water shortage,
there have been some cases where it's gotten acceptable.
But it takes some work because the people who are opposed to it,
who are opposed to this process.
They have sayings like, you know.
Oh, toilet to tap.
Telet to tap, yes, toilet to tap.
That's the one.
And so they push it in your face and then they can sue.
And in our country, you know, you can sue and stop anything for a while.
So this has happened.
But for the public health point of view, producing purified water from sewage is a very positive thing.
And disgust gets in the way of it a little.
So it sounds like a marketing problem.
Yes. What is the answer? I mean, how can we get people to get over that disgust factor so that, you know, I mean, this is about public health, right?
Well, it's interesting that reason doesn't work very well with disgust, explaining to people that it's not really disgusting.
When we drop a cockroach into juice and people won't drink it, we say, then why won't you drink it? And they say, well, cockroach is about disease vectors, you know, I can get this.
We say, okay, we'll do it with a sterilized cockroach. This cockroach.
you're safer than you're for.
So we put it in, we take it out,
and I still don't want it.
So we have a situation where reasoning with people doesn't help.
The best thing is exposure.
If you get exposed to something that's mildly disgusting,
not terribly disgusting to start with,
you get used to it,
and then you don't pay any attention to it.
And that's certainly true with water.
And I think it's also true with insects,
something else I've discovered.
Insects are a very good source of food,
and they're inexpensive and they benefit for sustainability
and they don't come with a killing problem.
Most people don't mind killing mealworms, you know, or something like that.
So the main thing is to get people to try them
and then try them a little more and then get used to them
because that's a powerful way of doing things.
Is it in some sense the idea that they came out of the dirt
in addition to that?
I mean, but all animals at some point are, you know, in something dirty.
You can make stories about this.
I mean, people think pigs of sort of dirty animals because they eat garbage.
Cows don't eat garbage, but people are very happy to eat pork, not Orthodox Jews, but most people.
It's very hard to figure out why some animals are more disgusting than others.
It is true that they have slimy habits or if they're carnivores.
We tend not to like to eat carnivores, like cats or dogs.
That's maybe because they eat meat.
and they also have much more putrid feces.
You know, elephant dung or cow dung is not that smelly, less disgusting than leopard dung.
So there are a lot of things going on there.
There's a lot of people interested in, but no one's gotten too far on why certain animals are eaten and others are not.
Why is it that a lot of people like really gross humor?
I mean, you know, every little kid and a lot of adults will laugh at poop jokes, but what's the connection?
between disgust and humor?
There is a big connection.
Everyone who's out a little boy
knows that little boys love to gross out their parents
and gross out little girls.
Anyway, so, yeah, it is a source of humor.
I think it's part of a much bigger picture
that humans get a lot of pleasure
out of doing things and enjoying them
that are originally negative.
So they'd like to go down roller coasters
because their body thinks
that they're going to drop into their death,
but they know they're not.
There's something pleasant about experiencing something negative
but knowing it's not really threatening.
So poop jokes are not threatening to you.
You're not experiencing it directly.
So if you're walking down the street
and someone in a tux and partners in a gown
going to an event and they step in dog do,
that's sort of funny.
But if you step in dog do, it's not funny.
So the defense of, I call it benign masochism, being safe, a feeling that you experience
something negative and your body is telling you get out of here, but you know that it's really
okay.
And there's a certain pleasure in that.
And I think that's partly what's going on with disgust humor.
Well, we've talked about how disgust may have started as a way to keep ourselves from eating
on safe foods.
But now we use the term a lot more broadly.
We will talk about being disgusted by a person's selfish behavior, for example.
Is that the same kind of disgust that we feel viscerally when we see something like poop?
Well, it's a big discussion in the literature now as to whether what we call moral disgust is really just a name disgust attached to it or it really involves a similar reaction.
So some people will make disgust faces when they hear about certain kinds of crimes, particularly bodily crimes like murder.
The big issue is, are all moral events, immoral events disgusting?
The answer seems to be no.
It's only a certain subset of them.
That subset that has to do with body and purity.
So people might say that, for example, using a crucifix as a doorstop is disgusting.
Because that's a violation of what Richard Schuader calls the ethics of divinity.
There's certain things that are sacred and you don't defile them.
And that's the kind of thing that is discussed.
Other people think it's more about bodily things, like being slashed or murdered or, you know,
cannibalism.
But it is clear that in some cases of moral disgust, people do seem to feel nauseous.
Incess is a great example.
people tend to feel nauseous about an insect,
but that's not true for things like theft.
There's a bloodless crimes.
So it looks like anger is the emotion that's mostly involved in most,
what we call immoral behavior,
but there's a subset of it having to do with bodies or divinity,
we might call, which is disgust-related.
That subset is much less in the United States than say in Hindu India,
where divinity is a major issue, sacredness of food, a very big issue.
But in the United States, we limit that.
And most of our laws and crimes are about harming other people.
Most of the moral violations that disgusts involvement don't necessarily harm other people.
For example, burning the American flag doesn't really harm any other people.
But it's a divinity violation.
It's disgusting.
Disgusting in public.
loosely to mean bad.
You say, that's disgusting.
You say, I heard that so-and-so does something minor.
I don't go.
Cheats on their income tax regularly.
And, oh, that's disgusting.
But that says the very loose use of the word, where you're just saying bad.
And so one of the problems is you have to distinguish the use of the word
disgust to mean bad to discuss in a more narrow, interesting sense.
So what are the big questions that remain to be answered?
about disgust. Are you still doing research in this area? And what would you like to know that you
don't know yet? Well, first of all, my own research, I've gotten out of most discussed research. And the
reason is it's become very popular. I like to work on things that not many people are working on.
And disgust is a hot subject now. So I'd have to read too many things to be able to do my research.
I am interested in one feature of disgust, which not many people are interested in, which is contagion.
the idea that disgusting things are contaminating.
What does it mean that the juice that a cockroach was dipped into is now bad?
What is it in your mind that has happened to that juice?
Essentially, it's cockroachness has entered that juice,
just like Hitler has entered his sweater, even after you launder it.
So I'm interested in what the thoughts are, that what is it this stuff that comes in?
Some of it's like germs, which is, of course, the origin of disgust.
but others are not a thing.
So, for example, you can do anything you want to hit the sweater
and people don't want to wear it.
You can kill all the germs in it, you can wash it and wash it and wash it.
So there's something more spiritual in people's head
that enters from Hitler that is not washable.
And I'm interested in that sort of thing.
That's an issue in disgust, but the biggest issue in discussed now
is what first issue is one of the brain mechanisms of it.
And what's interesting about that is it's very easy,
to get people disgusted. It's much easier to get people disgusted than to get them angry.
So if they're in a scanner, for example, all I have to think of is a piece of dog poop on a
plate and they're disgusted. You can't get them really angry so easily. So it's been a very
good tool to study how people react to emotions. The other big issue is what moral disgust is.
Is it really the same kind of thing as disgust? It's the same thing. It's the same thing.
system that's involved, or is it really just the word discussed that's tagged on to these things?
Dr. Rosson, I want to thank you for joining me today. I think we had a perfectly disgusting
conversation. Okay, good. Well, thanks a nice talking to you.
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