Warneken Felix, Tomasello Michael
Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Br J Psychol. 2009 Aug;100(Pt 3):455-71. doi: 10.1348/000712608X379061. Epub 2008 Dec 5.
Human infants as young as 14 to 18 months of age help others attain their goals, for example, by helping them to fetch out-of-reach objects or opening cabinets for them. They do this irrespective of any reward from adults (indeed external rewards undermine the tendency), and very likely with no concern for such things as reciprocation and reputation, which serve to maintain altruism in older children and adults. Humans' nearest primate relatives, chimpanzees, also help others instrumentally without concrete rewards. These results suggest that human infants are naturally altruistic, and as ontogeny proceeds and they must deal more independently with a wider range of social contexts, socialization and feedback from social interactions with others become important mediators of these initial altruistic tendencies.
年仅14至18个月大的人类婴儿会帮助他人实现目标,例如帮他们拿够不着的东西或为他们打开橱柜。他们这样做与是否能从成年人那里得到任何奖励无关(事实上,外部奖励会削弱这种倾向),而且很可能并不在意诸如互惠和声誉之类的事情,而这些因素在年龄稍大的儿童和成年人中有助于维持利他行为。人类最近的灵长类近亲黑猩猩也会在没有具体奖励的情况下对他人提供工具性帮助。这些结果表明,人类婴儿天生具有利他性,随着个体发育的推进,他们必须更独立地应对更广泛的社会环境,来自与他人社交互动的社会化和反馈就成为了这些初始利他倾向的重要调节因素。