Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 USA; Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 USA; Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
Curr Biol. 2018 Jan 22;28(2):280-286.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.11.061. Epub 2018 Jan 4.
Humans closely monitor others' cooperative relationships [1, 2]. Children and adults willingly incur costs to reward helpers and punish non-helpers-even as bystanders [3-5]. Already by 3 months, infants favor individuals that they observe helping others [6-8]. This early-emerging prosocial preference may be a derived motivation that accounts for many human forms of cooperation that occur beyond dyadic interactions and are not exhibited by other animals [9, 10]. As the most socially tolerant nonhuman ape [11-17] (but see [18]), bonobos (Pan paniscus) provide a powerful phylogenetic test of whether this trait is derived in humans. Bonobos are more tolerant than chimpanzees, can flexibly obtain food through cooperation, and voluntarily share food in captivity and the wild, even with strangers [11-17] (but see [18]). Their neural architecture exhibits a suite of characteristics associated with greater sensitivity to others [19, 20], and their sociality is hypothesized to have evolved due to selection against male aggression [21-23]. Here we show in four experiments that bonobos discriminated agents based on third-party interactions. However, they did not exhibit the human preference for helpers. Instead, they reliably favored a hinderer that obstructed another agent's goal (experiments 1-3). In a final study (experiment 4), bonobos also chose a dominant individual over a subordinate. Bonobos' interest in hinderers may reflect attraction to dominant individuals [24]. A preference for helpers over hinderers may therefore be derived in humans, supporting the hypothesis that prosocial preferences played a central role in the evolution of human development and cooperation.
人类密切关注他人的合作关系[1,2]。儿童和成人愿意付出代价来奖励帮助者和惩罚不帮助者——即使是旁观者[3-5]。早在 3 个月大的时候,婴儿就喜欢观察到帮助他人的个体[6-8]。这种早期出现的亲社会偏好可能是一种衍生动机,解释了许多发生在二元互动之外的人类合作形式,而其他动物则没有表现出这种动机[9,10]。作为最具社会宽容性的非人类猿类[11-17](但见[18]),倭黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)为人类是否具有这种特质提供了一个强有力的系统发育检验。倭黑猩猩比黑猩猩更宽容,能够通过合作灵活地获取食物,并在圈养和野外自愿与陌生人分享食物[11-17](但见[18])。它们的神经结构表现出一系列与对他人更敏感相关的特征[19,20],并且它们的社会性被假设是由于对雄性攻击性的选择而进化而来的[21-23]。在这里,我们在四项实验中表明,倭黑猩猩根据第三方互动来区分代理人。然而,它们并没有表现出人类对帮助者的偏好。相反,它们可靠地偏爱一个阻碍另一个代理人目标的妨碍者(实验 1-3)。在最后一项研究(实验 4)中,倭黑猩猩也选择了一个支配个体而不是一个从属个体。倭黑猩猩对妨碍者的兴趣可能反映了对支配个体的吸引力[24]。因此,对帮助者的偏好而不是对妨碍者的偏好可能是人类特有的,这支持了亲社会偏好在人类发展和合作进化中发挥核心作用的假设。