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经济游戏中资源分配和接收所预测的嫉妒。

Jealousy as Predicted by Allocation and Reception of Resources in an Economic Game.

机构信息

Centro de Investigación en Complejidad Social, Facultad del Gobierno, Universidad del Desarrollo, Santiago de Chile, Chile.

Laboratorio de Evolución y Relaciones interpersonales, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Estación central Santiago, Chile.

出版信息

Evol Psychol. 2024 Oct-Dec;22(4):14747049241289232. doi: 10.1177/14747049241289232.

Abstract

Evidence is abundant that evolution by selection has produced sex differences in the design of adaptations to solve the problems surrounding reproduction. A prime example is the design of human jealousy, which research suggests is triggered by distinct evoking acts that are specific challenges for women and men in their exclusive reproductive bond. It follows that jealousy would be directed toward driving away interlopers who could potentially threaten the bond with the romantic partner or increase mate retention efforts in response to sex-specific threats. To explore this possibility, we use as a methodological innovation an economic game for the evocation of jealousy. With a modified dictator game, we showed men and women in a committed relationship, conditions in which the partner or an intrasexual rival allocates money to (investing condition), or obtains money from (receiving condition), the partner or an opposite sex third party that they recently met. A sample of 56 heterosexual couples ( = 112) participated in a laboratory setting. Our results show the different scenarios of this dictator game exerted the expected evocation of jealousy (controlling individual differences), with women being more jealous by the partner's allocation of resources to a rival, and men reporting slightly more jealousy by their partner receiving money from a rival. We discuss the implications of this method to advance the comprehension of the adaptive function of sex differences in jealousy, the use of economic games, and possible modifications to improve the similarity of the game to a real assessment of actual male jealousy.

摘要

有大量证据表明,选择导致了适应生殖的设计出现性别差异。一个主要的例子是人类嫉妒的设计,研究表明,它是由独特的唤起行为触发的,这些行为是女性和男性在其排他性生殖关系中面临的具体挑战。因此,嫉妒会被引导去赶走可能威胁到与浪漫伴侣关系的入侵者,或者在面对特定性别威胁时增加伴侣保留的努力。为了探索这种可能性,我们使用经济博弈作为一种方法创新来唤起嫉妒。通过修改独裁者博弈,我们让处于稳定关系中的男性和女性在两种情况下分配金钱:一种是伴侣或同性竞争者向(投资条件)或从(接受条件)伴侣或最近遇到的异性第三方分配金钱;另一种是伴侣或同性竞争者向(投资条件)或从(接受条件)伴侣或最近遇到的异性第三方分配金钱。我们有 56 对异性恋伴侣( = 112)参与了实验室实验。我们的结果表明,这个独裁者博弈的不同场景产生了预期的嫉妒唤起(控制个体差异),女性对伴侣向竞争对手分配资源更嫉妒,而男性则报告说对伴侣从竞争对手那里获得金钱更嫉妒。我们讨论了这种方法对理解嫉妒的性别差异适应性功能、经济博弈的使用以及可能的修改以提高游戏与实际男性嫉妒评估的相似性的意义。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/7b72/11528616/a00226071e26/10.1177_14747049241289232-fig1.jpg

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