Centre for Human Brain Health, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham.
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford.
Psychol Sci. 2021 May;32(5):668-681. doi: 10.1177/0956797620975781. Epub 2021 Apr 16.
Social cohesion relies on prosociality in increasingly aging populations. Helping other people requires effort, yet how willing people are to exert effort to benefit themselves and others, and whether such behaviors shift across the life span, is poorly understood. Using computational modeling, we tested the willingness of 95 younger adults (18-36 years old) and 92 older adults (55-84 years old) to put physical effort into self- and other-benefiting acts. Participants chose whether to work and exert force (30%-70% of maximum grip strength) for rewards (2-10 credits) accrued for themselves or, prosocially, for another. Younger adults were somewhat selfish, choosing to work more at higher effort levels for themselves, and exerted less force in prosocial work. Strikingly, compared with younger adults, older people were more willing to put in effort for others and exerted equal force for themselves and others. Increased prosociality in older people has important implications for human behavior and societal structure.
社会凝聚力依赖于人口老龄化中越来越多的亲社会行为。帮助他人需要付出努力,但人们愿意付出多大的努力来使自己和他人受益,以及这种行为是否会随着年龄的增长而变化,这些都知之甚少。我们使用计算模型测试了 95 名年轻成年人(18-36 岁)和 92 名老年成年人(55-84 岁)在自我和他人受益行为中付出体力的意愿。参与者选择是否为自己或他人(另一名参与者)的奖励(2-10 个学分)付出努力(30%-70%的最大握力)。年轻成年人有些自私,选择在更高的努力水平上为自己工作,而在亲社会工作中则付出较少的力量。引人注目的是,与年轻成年人相比,老年人更愿意为他人付出努力,并且为自己和他人付出的力量相等。老年人的亲社会性增加对人类行为和社会结构具有重要意义。