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Culture and group|functional punishment behaviour


Culture and group-functional punishment behaviour | Cambridge Core

An economic experiment with Spanish Roma (Gitanos) reveals the existence of culture-specific motives for punishment.

Culture and group-functional punishment behaviour - PubMed

Humans often 'altruistically' punish non-cooperators in one-shot interactions among genetically unrelated individuals.

Culture and group-functional punishment behaviour - ResearchGate

This poses an evolutionary puzzle because altruistic punishment enforces cooperation norms that benefit the whole group but is costly for the punisher. One key ...

Culture is the Behavior You Reward and Punish | by Jocelyn Goldfein

Culture is powerful. It makes teams highly functional and gives meaning to our work. It's essential for organizational scale.

Group punishment does not always discount: Cultural difference in ...

Various transgressions and crimes can be accomplished by individuals, but are also committed by groups. A similar transgression may have ...

Cultural group selection - Wikipedia

For example, in a study that spanned a variety of cultures, testing behaviour in Ultimatum, Dictator, and Third-party punishment games, it was found that ...

Decoupling cooperation and punishment in humans shows that ...

... punishment, whereby individuals punish non-cooperators for the good of society? ... group mates ('punishment behaviours'; figure 5). This approach ...

Reinforcement learning of altruistic punishment differs between ...

We provided the first evidence of how social feedback dynamically influences group-biased altruistic punishment across cultures and the lifespan.

Norm violations and punishments across human societies - PMC

... group-typical beliefs about what constitutes appropriate behaviour in a given context. ... Cultural group selection, coevolutionary ...

Explaining the evolution of parochial punishment in humans - BORIS

Humans usually favour members of their own group, ethnicity or culture (parochial cooperation), and punish ... individuals extrapolate the punishment behaviour of ...

Punishment Mechanisms and Their Effect on Cooperation - JASSS

In CP no restrictions are made on who may punish who, instead the costs of punishing are not paid by the individual that punishes but by the entire group.

The evolution of altruistic punishment - PNAS

... group beneficial behaviors. The question is always, is group selection important under plausible conditions? With parameter values chosen to represent cultural ...

understanding-and-addressing-cultural-variation-in-costly-antisocial ...

punishment operate in a group-structured population. A linear public goods ... in biology: that the seemingly bizarre behaviour of antisocial punishment must.

Social norms and cultural diversity in the development of third-party ...

Norms specifying the punishment of selfishness were generally more influential than norms specifying the punishment of prosocial behaviour.

Do descriptive social norms drive peer punishment? Conditional ...

For each dyad in the main experiments, we independently sampled 50 participants from the pre-recorded pool to form the reference group. The behavior of the ...

Group-level ethnic composition influences altruistic punishment

(based on kinship and closeness) should favor punishment, whereas cultural group ... Can group-functional behaviors evolve by cultural group ...

Punishing the individual or the group for norm violation.

Background: It has recently been proposed that a key motivation for joining groups is the protection from consequences of negative behaviours, such as norm ...

Punishment is not a group adaptation

Abstract. Punitive behaviours are often assumed to be the result of an instinct for punishment. This instinct would have evolved to punish wrongdoers and it ...

Third-party punishment by preverbal infants - Nature

On the basis of current evidence, these types of actions might be functional as punitive behaviour, and the interaction might be worth ...

Altruistic Punishment and Between-Group Competition - SpringerLink

Since this behavioral pattern is unlikely to increase within-group cooperation, and therefore cannot have been subject to cultural group ...