Brodbeck Felix C, Kugler Katharina G, Reif Julia A M, Maier Markus A
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet Muenchen, Munich, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 16;8(12):e81558. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0081558. eCollection 2013.
Contrary to predictions from Expected Utility Theory and Game Theory, when making economic decisions in interpersonal situations, people take the interest of others into account and express various forms of solidarity, even in one-shot interactions with anonymous strangers. Research in other-regarding behavior is dominated by behavioral economical and evolutionary biological approaches. Psychological theory building, which addresses mental processes underlying other-regarding behavior, is rare. Based on Relational Models Theory (RMT, [1]) and Relationship Regulation Theory (RRT, [2]) it is proposed that moral motives influence individuals' decision behavior in interpersonal situations via conscious and unconscious (automatic) processes. To test our propositions we developed the 'Dyadic Solidarity Game' and its solitary equivalent, the 'Self-Insurance Game'. Four experiments, in which the moral motives "Unity" and "Proportionality" were manipulated, support the propositions made. First, it was shown that consciously activated moral motives (via framing of the overall goal of the experiment) and unconsciously activated moral motives (via subliminal priming) influence other-regarding behavior. Second, this influence was only found in interpersonal, not in solitary situations. Third, by combining the analyses of the two experimental games the extent to which participants apply the Golden Rule ("treat others how you wish to be treated") could be established. Individuals with a "Unity" motive treated others like themselves, whereas individuals with a "Proportionality" motive gave others less then they gave themselves. The four experiments not only support the assumption that morals matter in economic games, they also deliver new insights in how morals matter in economic decision making.
与预期效用理论和博弈论的预测相反,在人际情境中做出经济决策时,人们会考虑他人的利益并表现出各种形式的团结,即使是在与匿名陌生人的一次性互动中。关于亲社会行为的研究主要由行为经济学和进化生物学方法主导。探讨亲社会行为背后心理过程的心理学理论构建很少见。基于关系模型理论(RMT,[1])和关系调节理论(RRT,[2]),有人提出道德动机通过有意识和无意识(自动)过程影响个体在人际情境中的决策行为。为了检验我们的命题,我们开发了“二元团结博弈”及其单人等效形式“自我保险博弈”。四项实验对道德动机“团结”和“比例性”进行了操纵,支持了所提出的命题。首先,研究表明,有意识激活的道德动机(通过设定实验的总体目标)和无意识激活的道德动机(通过阈下启动)会影响亲社会行为。其次,这种影响只在人际情境中发现,而在单人情境中未发现。第三,通过结合对这两个实验博弈的分析,可以确定参与者应用黄金法则(“以你希望被对待的方式对待他人”)的程度。具有“团结”动机的个体对待他人就像对待自己一样,而具有“比例性”动机的个体给予他人的比给予自己的少。这四项实验不仅支持了道德在经济博弈中起作用的假设,还为道德在经济决策中如何起作用提供了新的见解。