Anthropological Institute and Museum, University of Zurich, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2010 Sep 12;365(1553):2723-35. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2010.0118.
In any given species, cooperation involves prosocial acts that usually return a fitness benefit to the actor. These acts are produced by a set of psychological rules, which will be similar in related species if they have a similar natural history of cooperation. Prosocial acts can be (i) reactive, i.e. in response to specific stimuli, or (ii) proactive, i.e. occur in the absence of such stimuli. We propose that reactive prosocial acts reflect sensitivity to (i) signals or signs of need and (ii) the presence and size of an audience, as modified by (iii) social distance to the partner or partners. We examine the evidence for these elements in humans and other animals, especially non-human primates, based on the natural history of cooperation, quantified in the context of food sharing, and various experimental paradigms. The comparison suggests that humans share with their closest living relatives reactive responses to signals of need, but differ in sensitivity to signs of need and cues of being watched, as well as in the presence of proactive prosociality. We discuss ultimate explanations for these derived features, in particular the adoption of cooperative breeding as well as concern for reputation and costly signalling during human evolution.
在任何给定的物种中,合作都涉及到通常会给行为者带来适应度好处的亲社会行为。这些行为是由一套心理规则产生的,如果相关物种具有相似的合作自然史,那么这些规则在这些物种中将会是相似的。亲社会行为可以是(i)反应性的,即对特定刺激的反应,或者(ii)主动性的,即在没有这种刺激的情况下发生。我们提出,反应性的亲社会行为反映了对(i)需求的信号或迹象以及(ii)观众的存在和规模的敏感性,这些敏感性受到(iii)与合作伙伴的社会距离的影响。我们根据合作的自然史,特别是基于食物分享和各种实验范式,在人类和其他动物,特别是非人类灵长类动物中,检验了这些因素的证据。比较表明,人类与最亲近的现存亲属共享对需求信号的反应性反应,但在对需求迹象和被观察到的线索的敏感性方面存在差异,以及在主动性亲社会行为的存在方面存在差异。我们讨论了这些衍生特征的最终解释,特别是在人类进化过程中合作繁殖的采用以及对声誉和昂贵信号的关注。