Graduate School of International Corporate Strategy, Hitotsubashi University, 2-1-2 Hitotsubashi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101-8439, Japan;
Brain Science Institute, Tamagawa University, 6-1-1 Tamagawa Gakuen, Machida, Tokyo 194-8610, Japan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Jun 13;114(24):6394-6399. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1608877114. Epub 2017 May 30.
Behavioral and neuroscientific studies explore two pathways through which internalized social norms promote prosocial behavior. One pathway involves internal control of impulsive selfishness, and the other involves emotion-based prosocial preferences that are translated into behavior when they evade cognitive control for pursuing self-interest. We measured 443 participants' overall prosocial behavior in four economic games. Participants' predispositions [social value orientation (SVO)] were more strongly reflected in their overall game behavior when they made decisions quickly than when they spent a longer time. Prosocially (or selfishly) predisposed participants behaved less prosocially (or less selfishly) when they spent more time in decision making, such that their SVO prosociality yielded limited effects in actual behavior in their slow decisions. The increase (or decrease) in slower decision makers was prominent among consistent prosocials (or proselfs) whose strong preference for prosocial (or proself) goals would make it less likely to experience conflict between prosocial and proself goals. The strong effect of RT on behavior in consistent prosocials (or proselfs) suggests that conflict between prosocial and selfish goals alone is not responsible for slow decisions. Specifically, we found that contemplation of the risk of being exploited by others (social risk aversion) was partly responsible for making consistent prosocials (but not consistent proselfs) spend longer time in decision making and behave less prosocially. Conflict between means rather than between goals (immediate versus strategic pursuit of self-interest) was suggested to be responsible for the time-related increase in consistent proselfs' prosocial behavior. The findings of this study are generally in favor of the intuitive cooperation model of prosocial behavior.
行为和神经科学研究探索了内化的社会规范促进亲社会行为的两种途径。一种途径涉及对冲动自私的内部控制,另一种途径涉及基于情感的亲社会偏好,当这些偏好逃避认知控制以追求自身利益时,它们会转化为行为。我们在四项经济游戏中测量了 443 名参与者的总体亲社会行为。当参与者快速做出决策时,他们的决策倾向(社会价值取向,SVO)比花费更长时间时更强烈地反映在他们的总体游戏行为中。亲社会(或自私)倾向的参与者在花费更多时间做出决策时表现出较少的亲社会(或较少的自私)行为,因此他们的 SVO 亲社会性在他们缓慢决策中的实际行为中产生的效果有限。在较慢的决策者中,这种增加(或减少)在一贯的亲社会者(或自利者)中更为明显,他们对亲社会(或自利)目标的强烈偏好使得他们不太可能在亲社会和自利目标之间产生冲突。反应时间(RT)对一贯亲社会者(或自利者)行为的强烈影响表明,亲社会和自私目标之间的冲突本身并不是导致缓慢决策的原因。具体来说,我们发现,对被他人剥削的风险的思考(社会风险厌恶)部分解释了为什么一贯的亲社会者(但不是一贯的自利者)会花费更多的时间做出决策,表现出较少的亲社会行为。被认为是导致一贯自利者亲社会行为随时间增加的原因是手段之间的冲突而不是目标之间的冲突(对自身利益的即时与策略性追求)。这项研究的发现总体上支持亲社会行为的直觉合作模型。