Title of article
Do infants detect indirect reciprocity?
Author/Authors
Meristo، نويسنده , , Marek and Surian، نويسنده , , Luca، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
12
From page
102
To page
113
Abstract
In social interactions involving indirect reciprocity, agent A acts prosocially towards B and this prompts C to act prosocially towards A. This happens because A’s actions enhanced its reputation in the eyes of third parties. Indirect reciprocity may have been of central importance in the evolution of morality as one of the major mechanisms leading to the selection of helping and fair attitudes. Here we show that 10-month-old infants expect third parties to act positively towards fair donors who have distributed attractive resources equally between two recipients, rather than toward unfair donors who made unequal distributions. Infants’ responses were dependent on the reciprocator’s perceptual exposure to previous relevant events: they expected the reciprocator to reward the fair donor only when it had seen the distributive actions performed by the donors. We propose that infants were able to generate evaluations of agents that were based on the fairness of their distributive actions and to generate expectations about the social preferences of informed third parties.
Keywords
Reciprocity , Fairness , theory of mind , social cognition , infancy
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2077821
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