Syme Kristen, Balliet Daniel
Institute of Security and Global Affairs, Universiteit Leiden.
Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
Psychol Rev. 2025 Jan;132(1):107-129. doi: 10.1037/rev0000509. Epub 2024 Dec 12.
Humans evolved to solve adaptive problems with kin and nonkin across fitness-relevant domains, including childcare and resource sharing, among others. Therefore, there is a great diversity in the types of interdependences humans experience across activities, relationships, and ecologies. To identify human psychological adaptations for cooperation, we argue that researchers must accurately characterize human fitness interdependence (FI). We propose a theoretical framework for assessing variation in FI that applies to the social interactions humans would have experienced across situations, relationships, and ecologies in the ancestral past and continue to experience today. According to this model, FI is characterized along four dimensions: (a) corresponding versus conflicting interests (b) mutual dependence versus independence, (c) asymmetrical versus symmetrical dependence (i.e., power), and (d) coordination. Because humans evolved to be highly mutually dependent on others to solve myriad adaptive problems, even compared to our closest living relatives, there is immense variability in the types of interdependences humans experience in daily life. Here, we describe the kinds of variation in interdependence humans experience, paying particular attention to social life in small-scale societies. In demonstrating the diversity of conflicts and coordination problems humans manage, we contend that humans evolved psychological adaptations to infer from signals, cues, and properties of the environment the four dimensions of FI under degrees of uncertainty to reduce the costs of cooperation. We conclude by discussing the theoretical implications of FI theory and emphasize that when individuals understand that others depend on them, it gives way to a new means of leverage to influence how others behave toward them. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
人类进化出在与亲属和非亲属合作解决适应性问题的能力,这些问题涉及与生存适应性相关的诸多领域,包括育儿和资源共享等。因此,人类在各种活动、人际关系和生态环境中所经历的相互依存类型具有极大的多样性。为了识别人类合作的心理适应性,我们认为研究人员必须准确描述人类的适应性相互依存(FI)。我们提出了一个评估FI变化的理论框架,该框架适用于人类在祖先时代经历过且至今仍在经历的各种情境、人际关系和生态环境中的社会互动。根据这个模型,FI可以从四个维度来描述:(a)利益对应与冲突;(b)相互依赖与独立;(c)不对称与对称依赖(即权力);(d)协调。由于人类进化为高度相互依赖他人来解决无数适应性问题,即使与现存的近亲相比,人类在日常生活中所经历的相互依存类型也存在巨大差异。在此,我们描述了人类所经历的相互依存的各种变化类型,特别关注小规模社会中的社会生活。在展示人类所处理的冲突和协调问题的多样性时,我们认为人类进化出了心理适应性,以便在一定程度的不确定性下,从环境的信号、线索和属性中推断出FI的四个维度,从而降低合作成本。我们通过讨论FI理论的理论意义来结束本文,并强调当个体意识到他人依赖自己时,这会产生一种新的影响力手段,从而影响他人对自己的行为方式。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)