The coevolution of cultural groups and ingroup favoritism

Détails

Ressource 1Télécharger: BIB_3349730A2242.P001.pdf (313.89 [Ko])
Etat: Public
Version: de l'auteur⸱e
ID Serval
serval:BIB_3349730A2242
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
The coevolution of cultural groups and ingroup favoritism
Périodique
Science
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Efferson C., Lalive R., Fehr E.
ISSN
0036-8075
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
09/2008
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
321
Numéro
5897
Pages
1844-1849
Langue
anglais
Résumé
Cultural boundaries have often been the basis for discrimination, nationalism, religious wars, and genocide. Little is known, however, about how cultural groups form or the evolutionary forces behind group affiliation and ingroup favoritism. Hence, we examine these forces experimentally and show that arbitrary symbolic markers, though initially meaningless, evolve to play a key role in cultural group formation and ingroup favoritism because they enable a population of heterogeneous individuals to solve important coordination problems. This process requires that individuals differ in some critical but unobservable way and that their markers be freely and flexibly chosen. If these conditions are met, markers become accurate predictors of behavior. The resulting social environment includes strong incentives to bias interactions toward others with the same marker, and subjects accordingly show strong ingroup favoritism. When markers do not acquire meaning as accurate predictors of behavior, players show a markedly reduced taste for ingroup favoritism. Our results support the prominent evolutionary hypothesis that cultural processes can reshape the selective pressures facing individuals and so favor the evolution of behavioral traits not previously advantaged.
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Création de la notice
21/08/2008 16:22
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2019 14:19
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