Tactile disgust: Post-contact can be more disgusting than contact

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2022 Apr;75(4):652-665. doi: 10.1177/17470218211043688. Epub 2021 Sep 11.

Abstract

Several studies have examined if disgust can be evoked by contacting an object-yet none have examined if reported disgust changes when the hand leaves the object. This is surprising given that post-contact tactile disgust is probably a driver of hand hygiene. We examined contact and post-contact tactile disgust and its sensory origins. Participants were asked to touch several objects, making sensory, disgust, and desire-to-handwash evaluations. These ratings were made at three stages-of-contact: object-contact (just touch), post-contact (just touch), and visual post-contact (touch, vision). Disgust was typically highest at post-contact (when the hand left the object). Stickiness and wetness were uniquely predictive of object-contact disgust. Only stickiness drove post-contact disgust, and only wetness visual post-contact disgust. Hand-washing desire was primarily driven by quantity of residue perceived on the hand. These findings suggest that tactile disgust is a multisensory and iterative process relating to object- and residue-adhesiveness.

Keywords: Tactile; disgust; hand washing desire; post-contact; visual texture.

MeSH terms

  • Disgust*
  • Hand
  • Humans
  • Touch / physiology
  • Touch Perception* / physiology
  • Vision, Ocular