Life may not be fair, but humans have a strong bias for fairness. In
experiments, humans will generally reject or punish a partner who offers
noticeably less than half of a shared reward, even if they wind up
empty-handed. Chimps, it turns out, are not so picky and will
(rationally, an economist might add) take whatever they can get,
according to an October 2007 Science paper. So what could explain this
difference between our closest living relatives and us?



The answer may lie in the social relationships that influence so many of
our actions. Recent studies of primate fairness seem to contradict one
another-unless you consider who exactly is cheating whom.

In 2003 a provocative study led by Sarah F. Brosnan
<http://www.gsu.edu/%7Ewwwpsy/faculty/brosnan.htm>  , now at Georgia
State University <http://www.gsu.edu>  , concluded that capuchin monkeys
were exhibiting humanlike social indignation when they turned down
unfair deals. The monkeys refused to perform tasks if they saw
companions getting better rewards for the same work. They threw
tantrums, and their food rewards, protest the unequal treatment.

In 2006, however, a group at American University reported the opposite
result-their capuchins' behavior was not affected by the food their
partners got. In response, Brosnan's group released an updated
study, again showing the capuchins's penchant for fairness. But some
experts are still not convinced-Clive Wynne
<http://www.psych.ufl.edu/%7Ewynne>   of the University of Florida
<http://www.ufl.edu>   warns that the different study designs make
comparisons "messy."

Brosnan argues that social relationships are more important than the
other groups are accounting for. Her groups found that chimpanzees were
more likely to accept unfair deals from members of their social group
than from outsiders. In another study, humans accepted unfair deals from
computers but not from people. These results imply that relationships
matter when primates judge fairness, Brosnan says, and "may explain
the failure to find a response in (the science) study." The chimps,
in other words, may have been willing to accept the unfair offers
because they came from old pals.

Studying animal fairness could ultimately help us understand human
cooperation and justice-but the jury is still out.


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>







Explore the new world of dreaming through LUCID DREAMING!!!
<http://www.lucid-dreaming-kit.com/?afl=47251>   Explore the world of
your mind...

Reply via email to