Li Siying, Hao Xinmin, Mei Yueqi, Cheng Yinyi, Sun Nan, Qu Chen
Key Laboratory of Brain, Cognition and Education Sciences, Ministry of Education, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, China.
School of Psychology, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, China.
Front Psychol. 2021 Aug 18;12:690494. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.690494. eCollection 2021.
Whether to trust or distrust another individual is a complex interpersonal challenge, especially when such individuals behave inconsistently. It is still unclear as to how individuals learn and adapt to fluctuations in the trustworthiness of others and how this process changes from adolescence to adulthood. To address these issues, we implemented repeated rounds of a trust game within the context of a complicated and changeable interpersonal environment. Specifically, adolescents and adults played the role of trustors who had to decide whether to invest money in two anonymous partners carrying the risk of no reciprocation. Unbeknownst to participants, these two partners had different trustworthiness profiles: one partner initially yielded a higher initial return rate (70%) while the other initially yielded a lower initial return rate (30%). Crucially, over repeated rounds, these two partners gradually changed their responses to the point where, finally, return rates were both neutral (50%). Results indicated that all participants showed less updating in the negative direction in response to good-to-neutral partners while more updating in the positive direction in response to the bad-to-neutral partner. Compared to adults, this behavioral disparity in responses to good-to-neutral and bad-to-neutral partners was less pronounced in adolescents. Based on the computational modeling approach, the potential mechanisms underlying their behavioral patterns were revealed: the higher learning rate promoted flexible adaptions in participants to untrustworthy trustees as they changed to neutral. The less pronounced distinction between good-to-neutral and bad-to-neutral partners in adolescents was related to their lower learning rate. Overall, our study extends the understanding of trust behavior to a fluctuating social context and highlights the role of social learning in social emotion and interaction.
是否信任另一个人是一项复杂的人际挑战,尤其是当这些人的行为不一致时。目前尚不清楚个体如何学习并适应他人可信度的波动,以及这个过程从青春期到成年期是如何变化的。为了解决这些问题,我们在一个复杂多变的人际环境中进行了多轮信任游戏。具体而言,青少年和成年人扮演信任者的角色,他们必须决定是否向两个匿名伙伴投资金钱,而这两个伙伴存在不回报的风险。参与者不知道的是,这两个伙伴有着不同的可信度特征:一个伙伴最初的回报率较高(70%),而另一个伙伴最初的回报率较低(30%)。至关重要的是,在重复的轮次中,这两个伙伴逐渐改变了他们的反应,最终回报率都变为中性(50%)。结果表明,所有参与者在面对从好到中性的伙伴时,在负面方向上的更新较少,而在面对从坏到中性的伙伴时,在正面方向上的更新较多。与成年人相比,青少年在面对从好到中性和从坏到中性的伙伴时,这种行为差异不太明显。基于计算建模方法,揭示了他们行为模式背后的潜在机制:较高的学习率促使参与者在不可信的受托人变为中性时进行灵活适应。青少年在从好到中性和从坏到中性的伙伴之间不太明显的区别与他们较低的学习率有关。总体而言,我们的研究将对信任行为的理解扩展到了一个波动的社会背景中,并突出了社会学习在社会情感和互动中的作用。