Journal ArticleUnknown
Impartial Institutions, Pathogen Stress and the Expanding Social Network
Author Affiliations
Arizona State University, University of Zurich, California University of Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania, ...
Published InHuman Nature
Year2014
Citations128
Abstract
Anthropologists have documented substantial cross-society variation in people's willingness to treat strangers with impartial, universal norms versus favoring members of their local community. Researchers have proposed several adaptive accounts for these differences. One variant of the pathogen stress hypothesis predicts that people will be more likely to favor local in-group members when they are under greater infectious disease threat. The material security hypothesis instead proposes that institutions that permit people to meet their basic needs through impartial interactions with strangers reinforce a tendency toward impartiality, whereas people lacking such institutions must rely on local community members to meet their basic needs. Some studies have examined these hypotheses using self-reported preferences, but not with behavioral measures. We conducted behavioral experiments in…
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