Spontaneous cooperation for prosocials, but not for proselfs: Social value orientation moderates spontaneous cooperation behavior

2016 | Zeitschriftenartikel. Eine Publikation mit Affiliation zur Georg-August-Universität Göttingen.

Spring zu: Zitieren & Links | Dokumente & Medien | Details | Versionsgeschichte

Zitiervorschlag

​Spontaneous cooperation for prosocials, but not for proselfs: Social value orientation moderates spontaneous cooperation behavior​
Mischkowski, D. & Gloeckner, A.​ (2016) 
Scientific Reports6 art. 21555​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep21555 

Dokumente & Medien

srep21555.pdf388.76 kBAdobe PDF

Lizenz

Published Version

Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

Details

Autor(en)
Mischkowski, Dorothee; Gloeckner, Andreas
Zusammenfassung
Cooperation is essential for the success of societies and there is an ongoing debate whether individuals have therefore developed a general spontaneous tendency to cooperate or not. Findings that cooperative behavior is related to shorter decision times provide support for the spontaneous cooperation effect, although contrary results have also been reported. We show that cooperative behavior is better described as person x situation interaction, in that there is a spontaneous cooperation effect for prosocial but not for proself persons. In three studies, one involving population representative samples from the US and Germany, we found that cooperation in a public good game is dependent on an interaction between individuals' social value orientation and decision time. Increasing deliberation about the dilemma situation does not affect persons that are selfish to begin with, but it is related to decreasing cooperation for prosocial persons that gain positive utility from outcomes of others and score high on the related general personality trait honesty/humility. Our results demonstrate that the spontaneous cooperation hypothesis has to be qualified in that it is limited to persons with a specific personality and social values. Furthermore, they allow reconciling conflicting previous findings by identifying an important moderator for the effect.
Erscheinungsdatum
2016
Status
published
Herausgeber
Nature Publishing Group
Zeitschrift
Scientific Reports 
ISSN
2045-2322

Export Metadaten

Referenzen

Zitationen


Social Media