Kiyonari Toko, Barclay Pat
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2008 Oct;95(4):826-42. doi: 10.1037/a0011381.
Cooperation among nonrelatives can be puzzling because cooperation often involves incurring costs to confer benefits on unrelated others. Punishment of noncooperators can sustain otherwise fragile cooperation, but the provision of punishment suffers from a "second-order" free-riding problem because nonpunishers can free ride on the benefits from costly punishment provided by others. One suggested solution to this problem is second-order punishment of nonpunishers; more generally, the threat or promise of higher order sanctions might maintain the lower order sanctions that enforce cooperation in collective action problems. Here the authors report on 3 experiments testing people's willingness to provide second-order sanctions by having participants play a cooperative game with opportunities to punish and reward each other. The authors found that people supported those who rewarded cooperators either by rewarding them or by punishing nonrewarders, but people did not support those who punished noncooperators--they did not reward punishers or punish nonpunishers. Furthermore, people did not approve of punishers more than they did nonpunishers, even when nonpunishers were clearly unwilling to use sanctions to support cooperation. The results suggest that people will much more readily support positive sanctions than they will support negative sanctions.
非亲属之间的合作可能令人费解,因为合作往往涉及付出代价去为无关的他人提供益处。惩罚不合作者能够维持原本脆弱的合作,但惩罚的实施存在一个“二阶”搭便车问题,因为不实施惩罚者可以从他人实施的代价高昂的惩罚所带来的益处中搭便车。针对这个问题,一种建议的解决方案是对不实施惩罚者进行二阶惩罚;更普遍地说,高阶制裁的威胁或承诺可能会维持在集体行动问题中执行合作的低阶制裁。在此,作者报告了3项实验,通过让参与者进行一个有相互惩罚和奖励机会的合作游戏,来测试人们提供二阶制裁的意愿。作者发现,人们会支持那些通过奖励合作者(要么自己奖励他们,要么惩罚不奖励者)来奖励合作者的人,但人们不支持那些惩罚不合作者的人——他们不奖励实施惩罚者,也不惩罚不实施惩罚者。此外,即使不实施惩罚者明显不愿意使用制裁来支持合作,人们对实施惩罚者的认可程度也并不高于对不实施惩罚者的认可程度。结果表明,人们更愿意支持积极制裁,而不是消极制裁。