Delton Andrew W, Robertson Theresa E
Center for Evolutionary Psychology and Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara.
Evol Hum Behav. 2012 Nov 1;33(6):715-725. doi: 10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2012.05.007. Epub 2012 Sep 3.
Humans and other animals have a variety of psychological abilities tailored to the demands of asocial foraging, that is, foraging without coordination or competition with other conspecifics. Human foraging, however, also includes a unique element, the creation of resource pooling systems. In this type of social foraging, individuals contribute when they have excess resources and receive provisioning when in need. Is this behavior produced by the same psychology as asocial foraging? If so, foraging partners should be judged by the same criteria used to judge asocial patches of resources: the net energetic benefits they provide. The logic of resource pooling speaks against this. Maintaining such a system requires the ability to judge others not on their short-term returns, but on the psychological variables that guide their behavior over the long-term. We test this idea in a series of five studies using an implicit measure of categorization. Results showed that (1) others are judged by the costs they incur (a variable not relevant to asocial foraging) whereas (2) others are not judged by the benefits they provide when benefits provided are unrevealing of underlying psychological variables (despite this variable being relevant to asocial foraging). These results are suggestive of a complex psychology designed for both social and asocial foraging.
人类和其他动物拥有多种适应非社会觅食需求的心理能力,即无需与其他同种个体协作或竞争的觅食。然而,人类觅食还包含一个独特元素,即资源共享系统的创建。在这种社会觅食类型中,个体在拥有多余资源时做出贡献,在有需要时接受他人提供的物资。这种行为是由与非社会觅食相同的心理产生的吗?如果是这样,觅食伙伴应该按照用于评判非社会资源区域的相同标准来评判:它们所提供的净能量收益。资源共享的逻辑与此相悖。维持这样一个系统需要具备根据他人长期行为所依据的心理变量而非短期回报来评判他人的能力。我们通过一系列五项研究,使用分类的隐性测量方法来检验这一观点。结果表明:(1)人们根据他人所产生的成本来评判他人(这是一个与非社会觅食无关的变量),而(2)当所提供的收益无法揭示潜在心理变量时,人们不会根据他人所提供的收益来评判他人(尽管这个变量与非社会觅食相关)。这些结果表明存在一种为社会和非社会觅食而设计的复杂心理。