Integrative Anthropological Sciences, Department of Anthropology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-3210, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2013 Aug 14;280(1768):20131615. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2013.1615. Print 2013 Oct 7.
Helping, i.e. behaviour increasing the fitness of others, can evolve when directed towards kin or reciprocating partners. These predictions have been tested in the context of food sharing both in human foragers and non-human primates. Here, we performed quantitative meta-analyses on 32 independent study populations to (i) test for overall effects of reciprocity on food sharing while controlling for alternative explanations, methodological biases, publication bias and phylogeny and (ii) compare the relative effects of reciprocity, kinship and tolerated scrounging, i.e. sharing owing to costs imposed by others. We found a significant overall weighted effect size for reciprocity of r = 0.20-0.48 for the most and least conservative measure, respectively. Effect sizes did not differ between humans and other primates, although there were species differences in in-kind reciprocity and trade. The relative effect of reciprocity in sharing was similar to those of kinship and tolerated scrounging. These results indicate a significant independent contribution of reciprocity to human and primate helping behaviour. Furthermore, similar effect sizes in humans and primates speak against cognitive constraints on reciprocity. This study is the first to use meta-analyses to quantify these effects on human helping and to directly compare humans and other primates.
当行为指向亲属或互惠伙伴时,帮助他人,即增加他人适应性的行为,可以进化。这些预测已经在人类觅食者和非人类灵长类动物的食物分享背景下进行了测试。在这里,我们对 32 个独立的研究群体进行了定量荟萃分析,以(i)在控制替代解释、方法学偏差、出版偏差和系统发育的情况下,检验互惠对食物分享的总体影响,以及(ii)比较互惠、亲缘关系和容忍蹭食(即由于他人造成的成本而分享)的相对影响。我们发现,互惠的加权效应大小在最保守和最不保守的测量中分别为 0.20-0.48。人类和其他灵长类动物之间的效应大小没有差异,尽管在实物互惠和交易方面存在物种差异。分享中互惠的相对影响与亲缘关系和容忍蹭食的相对影响相似。这些结果表明,互惠对人类和灵长类动物的帮助行为有显著的独立贡献。此外,人类和灵长类动物中相似的效应大小表明互惠不受认知限制。这项研究首次使用荟萃分析来量化人类帮助行为中的这些影响,并直接比较人类和其他灵长类动物。