Beliefs about a brighter future for all humanity as an evolutionary adaptation to pathogen prevalence

  • Brian W. HAAS*
  • , Xiaobin LOU
  • , Victoria Wai Lan YEUNG
  • , Liman Man Wai LI
  • , M. Azhar HUSSAIN
  • , Mohsen JOSHANLOO
  • , Michael Harris BOND
  • , Farida GUEMAZ
  • , Mahmoud BOUSSENA
  • , Ángel SÁNCHEZ-RODRÍGUEZ
  • , Nuha ITER
  • , Olha VLASENKO
  • , Vivian Miu-Chi LUN
  • , Nur Amali AMINNUDDIN
  • , İdil IŞIK
  • , Oumar BARRY
  • , Márta FÜLÖP
  • , David IGBOKWE
  • , Mladen ADAMOVIC
  • , Ragna Benedikta GARÐARSDÓTTIR
  • Natalia SOBOLEVA, Julien TEYSSIER, Fumiko Kano GLÜCKSTAD, Joonha PARK, Plamen AKALIYSKI, June Chun YEUNG, Belkacem YAKHLEF, Arkadiusz WASIEL, Vladimir TURJAČANIN, Tra Thi Thanh KIEU, Claudio TORRES, Boris SOKOLOV, Rosita SOBHIE, David SIRLOPÚ, Heyla SELIM, Adil SAMEKIN, Ana Maria ROCHA, Muhammad RIZWAN, Md. REZA-A-RABBY, Ewa PALIKOT, Mateusz OLECHOWSKI, Ayu OKVITAWANLI, Danielle OCHOA, Martin NADER, Katarzyna MYŚLIŃSKA-SZAREK, Magdalena MOSANYA, Fatma MOKADEM, Linda MOHAMMED, Fridanna MARICCHIOLO, Arina MALYONOVA, Alexander MALYONOV, Elmina KAZIMZADE, Naved IQBAL, Maciej R. GÓRSKI, Biljana GJONESKA, Vladimer GAMSAKHURDIA, Agustin ESPINOSA, Alejandra DOMÍNGUEZ-ESPINOSA, Patrick DENOUX, Rasmata BAKYONO-NABALOUM, Laura ANDRADE, Anna ALMAKAEVA, Marwan AL-ZOUBI, Charity AKOTIA, Grace AKELLO, Kuba KRYS
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal PublicationsJournal Article (refereed)peer-review

Abstract

An important question in cogntive and evolutionary psychology is how the human mind anticipates the future and copes with stress and risk of disease. The parasite-stress model suggests that many patterns of human behavior and thought are adaptations to varying levels of exposure to parasites and pathogens. A growing body of health psychology research shows a link between positive future thinking and resiliency to various forms of disease. In this study, we investigate the link between historical pathogen prevalence in countries and individuals' perception of the future of humanity. We surveyed 18,981 participants across 68 nations, examining their beliefs about how well humanity will be doing 1000 years from now compared to the present. We found that individuals residing in regions with higher historical disease risk tend to have more positive views about the future of humanity than individuals residing in areas with lower historical disease risk. The difference could not be attributed to several other stress-inducing factors, such as climate stress, population density or objective or subjective socioeconomic indicators. This research contributes to a growing body of evidence demonstrating how disease risk shapes human cognition and encourages future exploration of the evolution of temporal forecasting and consciousness.
Original languageEnglish
Article number113398
Number of pages8
JournalPersonality and Individual Differences
Volume247
Early online date13 Aug 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors

Funding

This work was supported by Norway Grants 2014-2021 operated by the National Science Centre (Poland) under Project Contract # 2019/34/H/HS6/00597 (GRIEG); Polish National Science Centre (# 2020/37/B/HS6/03142); Hungarian NKFIH-OTKA-K 135963; Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development Grant 301298/2018-1; Ongoing Research Funding program (ORF-2025-1204), King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; HSE University Basic Research Program (Russia); and University of Roma Department of Educational Studies Grant DSF 2017-2018.

Keywords

  • Collective future thinking
  • Evolution
  • Humanity
  • Parasite stress
  • Pathogen prevalence

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