Cognitive foundations for helping and harming others: Making welfare tradeoffs in industrialized and small-scale societies

IF 3 1区 心理学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Evolution and Human Behavior Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2023.01.013
Andrew W. Delton , Adrian V. Jaeggi , Julian Lim , Daniel Sznycer , Michael Gurven , Theresa E. Robertson , Lawrence S. Sugiyama , Leda Cosmides , John Tooby
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

For many abilities, such as vision or language, our conscious experience is one of simplicity: We open our eyes and the world appears; we open our mouths and grammatical sentences tumble out. Yet these abilities rely on immensely complex, unconscious computations. Is this also true of abilities related to cooperation or competition, like deciding whether to share food or spread gossip? We tested whether decisions like these are guided by precise psychological variables, called welfare tradeoff ratios. Welfare tradeoff ratios summarize information about multiple sources of social value (such as whether a specific other person is kin or is generous with the self) along with information about the situation (such as what's at stake or who else is watching). We evaluated these hypothesized variables in four societies: among college students in the USA and Argentina and among two groups of Amazonian forager-horticulturalists, the Shuar of Ecuador and the Tsimane of Bolivia (ns = 167, 131, 73, 23). In all societies people made a series of hypothetical decisions where they had to weigh help or harm for themselves versus others. We found strong evidence that people trade off their welfare for others with consistency—a signature of decisions being guided by precise variables in the mind. We also found evidence in three of the societies that people discriminate among different categories of others in their welfare tradeoffs (e.g., friends versus acquaintances). Although most decisions about helping or harming feel simple and intuitive, they appear to be underwritten by precise computations.

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帮助和伤害他人的认知基础:在工业化和小规模社会中进行福利权衡
对于许多能力,如视觉或语言,我们的意识体验是简单的:我们睁开眼睛,世界就出现了;我们一张嘴,语法句子就脱口而出。然而,这些能力依赖于极其复杂、无意识的计算。与合作或竞争有关的能力,比如决定是分享食物还是传播流言,也是如此吗?我们测试了这样的决定是否受到精确的心理变量(福利权衡比率)的指导。福利权衡比率总结了社会价值的多个来源的信息(比如某个特定的人是否与自己有亲属关系,或者对自己是否慷慨)以及有关情况的信息(比如什么是利害攸关的,或者还有谁在关注)。我们在四个社会中对这些假设变量进行了评估:美国和阿根廷的大学生,以及两组亚马逊地区的采集园艺师,厄瓜多尔的Shuar和玻利维亚的Tsimane (ns = 167, 131, 73, 23)。在所有社会中,人们都会做出一系列假设的决定,在这些决定中,他们必须权衡自己对他人的帮助或伤害。我们发现了强有力的证据,表明人们为了他人的利益而牺牲自己的利益——这是一种由头脑中精确变量引导的决定的标志。我们还在三个社会中发现了证据,表明人们在福利权衡中会歧视不同类别的其他人(例如,朋友与熟人)。尽管大多数关于帮助或伤害的决定感觉简单而直观,但它们似乎是经过精确计算的。
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来源期刊
Evolution and Human Behavior
Evolution and Human Behavior 生物-行为科学
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
9.80%
发文量
62
审稿时长
82 days
期刊介绍: Evolution and Human Behavior is an interdisciplinary journal, presenting research reports and theory in which evolutionary perspectives are brought to bear on the study of human behavior. It is primarily a scientific journal, but submissions from scholars in the humanities are also encouraged. Papers reporting on theoretical and empirical work on other species will be welcome if their relevance to the human animal is apparent.
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