Waterloo Region Record

Subtle cues make sick people look sick

Skin colour seemed to be the most robust signal

- Ben Guarino

The next time a friend tells you that you look sick, hear the person out.

We are better than chance at detecting illness in others simply by looking at their faces, according to new research led by a Swedish psychologi­st.

“We can detect subtle cues related to the skin, eyes and mouth,” said John Axelsson of the Karolinska Institute, who cowrote the study published Tuesday in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B. “And we judge people as sick by those cues.”

Other species have more finely tuned disease radars, relying primarily on the sense of smell. And previous research, Axelsson noted, has shown that animals can sniff sickness in other animals. (A Canadian hospital enlisted the help of an English springer spaniel trained to smell bacterial spores that infect patients.)

Yet while there is some evidence that an unhealthy person gives off odours that another individual can identify as sickness, the face is our primary source of “social informatio­n for communicat­ion,” Axelsson said.

He and his colleagues, a team that included neuroscien­tists and psychologi­sts in Germany and Sweden, injected eight men and eight women with a molecule found in bacterial membranes. Like animals — from insects to mammals — people react very strongly to this substance, lipopolysa­ccharide.

“People did not really become sick from the bacteria,” Axelsson said, but their bodies did not know the bacteria weren’t actually attacking.

Their immune systems kicked into action, complete with feelings of sickness.

The scientists photograph­ed the subjects two hours and 10 minutes after the injection, around the time participan­ts said they felt the most unwell. They also photograph­ed the subjects on a different date after they received a placebo injection.

Axelsson and the team asked 60 students recruited from universiti­es in Stockholm to assess the photos. The students looked at the portraits one at a time. A sick face and healthy face from the same individual never appeared consecutiv­ely. They were given five seconds to look at each and identify the person in it as sick or healthy.

The students’ detection of immune responses was somewhat more accurate than sheer chance: on a scale of 0.5 to 1, 0.5 being completely random, the observers averaged a score of 0.62. The students had the most difficulty with three subjects, which is to say they had a tough time noticing any immune response. Still, they reliably judged the 13 others as sick, Axelsson said. (Of the 1,215 images identified as “sick,” nearly 800 were correct conclusion­s.)

Another group of 60 students was asked to rate pale lips, droopy mouths or other potentiall­y telltale features in the portraits.

“The change of skin colour seemed to be the most robust” signal, Axelsson said.

Heavy eyelids were also a strong cue related to illness.

“I am surprised,” said psychologi­st David Perrett, a researcher at the University of St Andrews in Scotland who was not involved with the research.

No one had studied whether humans can sense “experiment­ally induced sickness” by looking at faces, he said, and “sickness judgments turn out to be far more reliable” than other visual judgments — for instance, gauging someone’s personalit­y from a neutral expression.

If we look at familiar faces, we are probably even more accurate at observing sickness because we know what colour someone’s complexion should be or what their usual expression is, the researcher­s noted.

Looking for signs of illness on someone’s face might seem like a scientific curiosity. But Axelsson sees an avenue to improving public health. If people can more quickly recognize the features that suggest a contagious disease, his thinking goes, a higher proportion of society can avoid infection. Waiting until someone is coughing or sneezing might be too late.

“We are trying to tap into these first cues,” he said.

Axelsson and his colleagues are hunting for ways to improve the accuracy of detection. The psychologi­st said he hypothesiz­ed that observing disease was a learned behaviour. The next step, he said, is to study whether doctors and other medical profession­als are more accurate when rating sick faces than untrained students or the rest of us.

 ?? AUDREY HENDERSON, ST. ANDREWS UNIVERSITY ?? Scientists combined 16 photo portraits into one composite image. On the left, the composite ”sick” face, and on the right, the composite healthy one.
AUDREY HENDERSON, ST. ANDREWS UNIVERSITY Scientists combined 16 photo portraits into one composite image. On the left, the composite ”sick” face, and on the right, the composite healthy one.

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