Jara-Ettinger Julian, Gibson Edward, Kidd Celeste, Piantadosi Steve
Department of Brain & Cognitive Sciences, MIT, USA.
Department of Brain & Cognitive Sciences, University of Rochester, USA.
Dev Sci. 2016 Nov;19(6):1104-1110. doi: 10.1111/desc.12351. Epub 2015 Oct 21.
Cooperation often results in a final material resource that must be shared, but deciding how to distribute that resource is not straightforward. A distribution could count as fair if all members receive an equal reward (egalitarian distributions), or if each member's reward is proportional to their merit (merit-based distributions). Here, we propose that the acquisition of numerical concepts influences how we reason about fairness. We explore this possibility in the Tsimane', a farming-foraging group who live in the Bolivian rainforest. The Tsimane' learn to count in the same way children from industrialized countries do, but at a delayed and more variable timeline, allowing us to de-confound number knowledge from age and years in school. We find that Tsimane' children who can count produce merit-based distributions, while children who cannot count produce both merit-based and egalitarian distributions. Our findings establish that the ability to count - a non-universal, language-dependent, cultural invention - can influence social cognition.
合作往往会产生一种必须共享的最终物质资源,但决定如何分配该资源并非易事。如果所有成员都获得平等的奖励(平等主义分配),或者每个成员的奖励与其功绩成正比(基于功绩的分配),那么这种分配可以被视为公平的。在此,我们提出数字概念的习得会影响我们对公平的推理方式。我们在生活于玻利维亚雨林的农耕-觅食群体齐玛内人(Tsimane')中探究了这种可能性。齐玛内人学习计数的方式与工业化国家的儿童相同,但时间较晚且更具变化性,这使我们能够将数字知识与年龄和上学年限区分开来。我们发现,会计数的齐玛内儿童会进行基于功绩的分配,而不会计数的儿童则会进行基于功绩的分配和平等主义分配。我们的研究结果表明,计数能力——一种非普遍的、依赖语言的文化发明——会影响社会认知。