The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior

Evolutionary theories of altruism have suggested that reciprocal exchanges and ingroup favoritism have been important strategies leading to the evolution of altruistic behavior among strangers. This study investigates whether minimal information about an interaction partner's membership in a tr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michaela Gummerum, Masanori Takezawa, Monika Keller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2009-04-01
Series:Evolutionary Psychology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/147470490900700212
id doaj-866a0e78aba14d388665a0d3ad3e3e78
record_format Article
spelling doaj-866a0e78aba14d388665a0d3ad3e3e782020-11-25T03:24:02ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Psychology1474-70492009-04-01710.1177/14747049090070021210.1177_147470490900700212The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic BehaviorMichaela GummerumMasanori TakezawaMonika KellerEvolutionary theories of altruism have suggested that reciprocal exchanges and ingroup favoritism have been important strategies leading to the evolution of altruistic behavior among strangers. This study investigates whether minimal information about an interaction partner's membership in a trivial social group affects the allocations of adults and children in dictator game, reciprocity in a sequential prisoner's dilemma, and altruistic punishment in a third-party punishment game. In all, 155 adults and 157 students from second and sixth grade played these three economic games in either an ingroup, outgroup, or neutral condition. Adults and sixth-grade children allocated more to ingroup than to outgroup receivers in the dictator game, and adults punished ingroup non-cooperators more in the third-party punishment game than outgroup non-cooperators. When additional information about the other player's past behavior was presented, adults reciprocated equally with ingroup, outgroup, and neutral players, whereas children from sixth grade reciprocated more with ingroup and neutral than with outgroup players. Overall, the results of this study support the importance of group membership and reciprocity for adults' and older elementary school children's altruistic behavior. For younger elementary school children, however, reciprocity and group membership do not serve as salient social information that influence their altruistic behavior.https://doi.org/10.1177/147470490900700212
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michaela Gummerum
Masanori Takezawa
Monika Keller
spellingShingle Michaela Gummerum
Masanori Takezawa
Monika Keller
The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior
Evolutionary Psychology
author_facet Michaela Gummerum
Masanori Takezawa
Monika Keller
author_sort Michaela Gummerum
title The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior
title_short The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior
title_full The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior
title_fullStr The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Social Category and Reciprocity on Adults' and Children's Altruistic Behavior
title_sort influence of social category and reciprocity on adults' and children's altruistic behavior
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Psychology
issn 1474-7049
publishDate 2009-04-01
description Evolutionary theories of altruism have suggested that reciprocal exchanges and ingroup favoritism have been important strategies leading to the evolution of altruistic behavior among strangers. This study investigates whether minimal information about an interaction partner's membership in a trivial social group affects the allocations of adults and children in dictator game, reciprocity in a sequential prisoner's dilemma, and altruistic punishment in a third-party punishment game. In all, 155 adults and 157 students from second and sixth grade played these three economic games in either an ingroup, outgroup, or neutral condition. Adults and sixth-grade children allocated more to ingroup than to outgroup receivers in the dictator game, and adults punished ingroup non-cooperators more in the third-party punishment game than outgroup non-cooperators. When additional information about the other player's past behavior was presented, adults reciprocated equally with ingroup, outgroup, and neutral players, whereas children from sixth grade reciprocated more with ingroup and neutral than with outgroup players. Overall, the results of this study support the importance of group membership and reciprocity for adults' and older elementary school children's altruistic behavior. For younger elementary school children, however, reciprocity and group membership do not serve as salient social information that influence their altruistic behavior.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/147470490900700212
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelagummerum theinfluenceofsocialcategoryandreciprocityonadultsandchildrensaltruisticbehavior
AT masanoritakezawa theinfluenceofsocialcategoryandreciprocityonadultsandchildrensaltruisticbehavior
AT monikakeller theinfluenceofsocialcategoryandreciprocityonadultsandchildrensaltruisticbehavior
AT michaelagummerum influenceofsocialcategoryandreciprocityonadultsandchildrensaltruisticbehavior
AT masanoritakezawa influenceofsocialcategoryandreciprocityonadultsandchildrensaltruisticbehavior
AT monikakeller influenceofsocialcategoryandreciprocityonadultsandchildrensaltruisticbehavior
_version_ 1724603859552174080