Department of Psychology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2013 Sep 12;8(9):e73863. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073863. eCollection 2013.
People perform greater within-group cooperation when their groups face external threats, such as hostile outgroups or natural disasters. Researchers and social commentators suggest that high-ranking group members manipulate this "threat-dependent" cooperation by exaggerating threats in order to promote cooperation and suppress competition for their position. However, little systematic research tests this claim or possible situational moderators. In three studies, we use a cooperative group game to show that participants pay to increase others' perceptions of group threats, and spend more on manipulation when holding privileged positions. This manipulation cost-effectively elicits cooperation and sustains privilege, and is fostered by competition over position, not only position per se. Less cooperative people do more manipulation than more cooperative people do. Furthermore, these effects generalize to broader definitions of privilege. Conceptually, these results offer new insights into an understudied dimension of group behavior. Methodologically, the research extends cooperative group games to allow for analyzing more complex group dynamics.
当群体面临外部威胁时,如敌对群体或自然灾害,人们会在群体内部进行更多的合作。研究人员和社会评论家认为,高地位的群体成员通过夸大威胁来操纵这种“依赖于威胁的合作”,以促进合作,抑制其地位的竞争。然而,很少有系统的研究来检验这一说法或可能的情境调节因素。在三项研究中,我们使用合作小组游戏来表明参与者愿意支付增加他人对群体威胁的感知,并在担任特权职位时在操纵上花费更多。这种操纵以具有成本效益的方式引发合作并维持特权,并且受到职位竞争的推动,而不仅仅是职位本身。合作意愿较低的人比合作意愿较高的人进行更多的操纵。此外,这些影响还可以推广到更广泛的特权定义。从概念上讲,这些结果为群体行为的一个研究不足的维度提供了新的见解。从方法论上讲,这项研究将合作小组游戏扩展到可以分析更复杂的群体动态。