Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?

abstract: Food-sharing is central to the human experience, involving biological and sociocultural functions. In small-scale societies, sharing food reduces variance in daily food-consumption, allowing effective risk-management, and creating networks of interdependence. It was hypothesized that trust...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Guevara Beltran, Diego Guevara (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57032
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-570322020-06-02T03:01:11Z Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence? abstract: Food-sharing is central to the human experience, involving biological and sociocultural functions. In small-scale societies, sharing food reduces variance in daily food-consumption, allowing effective risk-management, and creating networks of interdependence. It was hypothesized that trust and interdependence would be fostered between people who shared food. Recruiting 221 participants (51% Female, Mage = 19.31), sharing food was found to decrease trust and interdependence in a Trust Game with $3.00 and a Dictator Game with chocolates. Participants trusted the least and gave the fewest chocolates when sharing food. Contrary to lay beliefs about sharing food, breaking bread with strangers may hinder rather than foster trust and giving in situations where competition over limited resources is salient, or under one-shot scenarios where people are unlikely to see each other again in the future. Dissertation/Thesis Guevara Beltran, Diego Guevara (Author) Aktipis, Athena C (Advisor) Kenrick, Douglas T (Committee member) Varnum, Michael C (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Psychology Social psychology Cooperation Food sharing Interdependence Trust eng 50 pages Masters Thesis Psychology 2020 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57032 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Social psychology
Cooperation
Food sharing
Interdependence
Trust
spellingShingle Psychology
Social psychology
Cooperation
Food sharing
Interdependence
Trust
Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?
description abstract: Food-sharing is central to the human experience, involving biological and sociocultural functions. In small-scale societies, sharing food reduces variance in daily food-consumption, allowing effective risk-management, and creating networks of interdependence. It was hypothesized that trust and interdependence would be fostered between people who shared food. Recruiting 221 participants (51% Female, Mage = 19.31), sharing food was found to decrease trust and interdependence in a Trust Game with $3.00 and a Dictator Game with chocolates. Participants trusted the least and gave the fewest chocolates when sharing food. Contrary to lay beliefs about sharing food, breaking bread with strangers may hinder rather than foster trust and giving in situations where competition over limited resources is salient, or under one-shot scenarios where people are unlikely to see each other again in the future. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Psychology 2020
author2 Guevara Beltran, Diego Guevara (Author)
author_facet Guevara Beltran, Diego Guevara (Author)
title Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?
title_short Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?
title_full Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?
title_fullStr Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?
title_full_unstemmed Does Sharing Food Influence Trust and Interdependence?
title_sort does sharing food influence trust and interdependence?
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.57032
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