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The language of cooperation: shared intentionality drives variation in helping as a function of group membership
Type of publication
Peer-reviewed
Publikationsform
Original article (peer-reviewed)
Author
McClung Jennifer Susan, Placì Sarah, Bangerter Adrian, Clément Fabrice, Bshary Redouan,
Project
The cognitive basis of variable cooperation in humans
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Original article (peer-reviewed)
Journal
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume (Issue)
284(1863)
Page(s)
20171682 - 20171682
Title of proceedings
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
DOI
10.1098/rspb.2017.1682
Open Access
URL
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2017.1682#d3e1225
Type of Open Access
Publisher (Gold Open Access)
Abstract
While we know that the degree to which humans are able to cooperate is unrivalled by other species, the variation humans actually display in their cooperative behaviour has yet to be fully explained. This may be because research based on experimental game-theoretical studies neglects fundamental aspects of human sociality and psychology, namely social interaction and language. Using a new optimal foraging game loosely modelled on the prisoner's dilemma, the egg hunt, we categorized players as either in-group or out-group to each other and studied their spontaneous language usage while they made interactive, potentially cooperative decisions. Both shared group membership and the possibility to talk led to increased cooperation and overall success in the hunt. Notably, analysis of players' conversations showed that in-group members engaged more in shared intentionality, the human ability to both mentally represent and then adopt another's goal, whereas out-group members discussed individual goals more. Females also helped more and displayed more shared intentionality in discussions than males. Crucially, we show that shared intentionality was the mechanism driving the increase in helping between in-group players over out-group players at a cost to themselves. By studying spontaneous language during social interactions and isolating shared intentionality as the mechanism underlying successful cooperation, the current results point to a probable psychological source of the variation in cooperation humans display.
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