Tilburg Center for Logic, General Ethics, and Philosophy of Science, Tilburg University, Tilburg Netherlands.
Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh UK.
Front Psychol. 2014 Oct 9;5:1154. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01154. eCollection 2014.
Although much work has recently been directed at understanding social decision-making, relatively little is known about how different types of feedback impact adaptive changes in social behavior. To address this issue quantitatively, we designed a novel associative learning task called the "Tipping Game," in which participants had to learn a social norm of tipping in restaurants. Participants were found to make more generous decisions from feedback in the form of facial expressions, in comparison to feedback in the form of symbols such as ticks and crosses. Furthermore, more participants displayed learning in the condition where they received social feedback than participants in the non-social condition. Modeling results showed that the pattern of performance displayed by participants receiving social feedback could be explained by a lower sensitivity to economic costs.
尽管最近有大量工作致力于理解社会决策,但对于不同类型的反馈如何影响社会行为的适应性变化,人们知之甚少。为了定量解决这个问题,我们设计了一种新的联想学习任务,称为“ tipping game”,参与者必须在餐厅中学习 tipping 的社会规范。与符号反馈(如打勾和打叉)相比,参与者从面部表情形式的反馈中做出了更为慷慨的决定。此外,与非社交条件相比,在参与者收到社交反馈的情况下,更多的参与者表现出学习行为。模型结果表明,接收社交反馈的参与者的表现模式可以用对经济成本的敏感性降低来解释。