De Dreu Carsten K W, Gross Jörg, Méder Zsombor, Giffin Michael, Prochazkova Eliska, Krikeb Jonathan, Columbus Simon
Institute of Psychology, Leiden University, 2333 AK Leiden, The Netherlands; Center for Experimental Economics and Political Decision Making, University of Amsterdam, 1018 WB Amsterdam, The Netherlands;
Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, Singapore University of Technology and Design, Singapore 487372;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Sep 20;113(38):10524-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1605115113. Epub 2016 Sep 6.
Intergroup conflict persists when and because individuals make costly contributions to their group's fighting capacity, but how groups organize contributions into effective collective action remains poorly understood. Here we distinguish between contributions aimed at subordinating out-groups (out-group aggression) from those aimed at defending the in-group against possible out-group aggression (in-group defense). We conducted two experiments in which three-person aggressor groups confronted three-person defender groups in a multiround contest game (n = 276; 92 aggressor-defender contests). Individuals received an endowment from which they could contribute to their group's fighting capacity. Contributions were always wasted, but when the aggressor group's fighting capacity exceeded that of the defender group, the aggressor group acquired the defender group's remaining resources (otherwise, individuals on both sides were left with the remainders of their endowment). In-group defense appeared stronger and better coordinated than out-group aggression, and defender groups survived roughly 70% of the attacks. This low success rate for aggressor groups mirrored that of group-hunting predators such as wolves and chimpanzees (n = 1,382 cases), hostile takeovers in industry (n = 1,637 cases), and interstate conflicts (n = 2,586). Furthermore, whereas peer punishment increased out-group aggression more than in-group defense without affecting success rates (Exp. 1), sequential (vs. simultaneous) decision-making increased coordination of collective action for out-group aggression, doubling the aggressor's success rate (Exp. 2). The relatively high success rate of in-group defense suggests evolutionary and cultural pressures may have favored capacities for cooperation and coordination when the group goal is to defend, rather than to expand, dominate, and exploit.
当个体为其群体的战斗能力做出代价高昂的贡献时,群体间冲突就会持续存在,其原因也在于此,但群体如何将这些贡献组织成有效的集体行动,目前仍知之甚少。在这里,我们区分了旨在使外群体服从的贡献(对外群体的攻击)和旨在保护内群体免受外群体可能攻击的贡献(对内群体的防御)。我们进行了两项实验,在一个多轮竞赛游戏中,三人组成的攻击群体与三人组成的防御群体对抗(n = 276;92次攻击 - 防御对抗)。个体获得一笔捐赠,他们可以从中为自己群体的战斗能力做出贡献。贡献总是会被浪费掉,但当攻击群体的战斗能力超过防御群体时,攻击群体就会获得防御群体剩余的资源(否则,双方个体都保留其捐赠的剩余部分)。对内群体的防御似乎比对外群体的攻击更强且协调性更好,防御群体在大约70%的攻击中幸存下来。攻击群体的这种低成功率与狼和黑猩猩等群体狩猎的捕食者(n = 1382例)、行业中的恶意收购(n = 1637例)以及国际冲突(n = 2586例)的情况类似。此外,虽然同伴惩罚对外群体攻击的增加幅度大于对内群体防御的增加幅度,但不影响成功率(实验1),顺序(而非同时)决策增加了对外群体攻击的集体行动协调性,使攻击者的成功率翻倍(实验2)。对内群体防御相对较高的成功率表明,当群体目标是防御而非扩张、支配和剥削时,进化和文化压力可能有利于合作与协调能力的发展。