Jensen Niels Holm, Petersen Michael Bang, Høgh-Olesen Henrik, Ejstrup Michael
Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 9, 8000, Aarhus, Denmark,
Hum Nat. 2015 Jun;26(2):210-34. doi: 10.1007/s12110-015-9229-4.
In recent years, evolutionary psychologists and anthropologists have debated whether ethnic markers have evolved to solve adaptive problems related to interpersonal coordination or to interpersonal cooperation. In the present study, we add to this debate by exploring how individuals living in a modern society utilize the accents of unfamiliar individuals to make social decisions in hypothetical economic games that measure interpersonal trust, generosity, and coordination. A total of 4603 Danish participants completed a verbal-guise study administered over the Internet. Participants listened to four speakers (two local and two nonlocal) and played a hypothetical Dictator Game, Trust Game, and Coordination Game with each of them. The results showed that participants had greater faith in coordinating successfully with local speakers than with nonlocal speakers. The coordination effect was strong for individuals living in the same city as the particular speakers and weakened as the geographical distance between the participants and the speakers grew. Conversely, the results showed that participants were not more generous toward or more trusting of local speakers compared with nonlocal speakers. Taken together, the results suggest that humans utilize ethnic markers of unfamiliar individuals to coordinate behavior rather than to cooperate.
近年来,进化心理学家和人类学家一直在争论民族特征的进化是为了解决与人际协调相关的适应性问题,还是与人际合作相关的适应性问题。在本研究中,我们通过探讨生活在现代社会中的个体如何利用陌生人的口音,在衡量人际信任、慷慨和协调的假设经济游戏中做出社会决策,来加入这场争论。共有4603名丹麦参与者完成了一项通过互联网进行的言语伪装研究。参与者听取了四位发言者(两位本地人,两位外地人)的讲话,并与他们每人玩了一场假设的独裁者游戏、信任游戏和协调游戏。结果表明,与外地人相比,参与者更有信心与本地人成功协调。对于与特定发言者生活在同一城市的个体,协调效应很强,并且随着参与者与发言者之间地理距离的增加而减弱。相反,结果表明,与外地人相比,参与者对本地人并不更慷慨或更信任。综合来看,结果表明人类利用陌生人的民族特征来协调行为,而不是进行合作。