Prejudicial attitudes are widely seen between human groups, with significant consequences. Actions taken in light of prejudice result in discrimination, and can contribute to societal division and hostile behaviours. We define a new class of group, the prejudicial group, with membership based on a common prejudicial attitude towards the out-group. It is assumed that prejudice acts as a phenotypic tag, enabling groups to form and identify themselves on this basis. Using computational simulation, we study the evolution of prejudicial groups, where members interact through indirect reciprocity. We observe how cooperation and prejudice coevolve, with cooperation being directed in-group. We also consider the co-evolution of these variables when ...
The present investigation modeled the emergence and persistence of intergroup bias and discriminatio...
Humans exhibit a remarkable capacity for cooperation among genetically unrelated individuals. Yet, h...
The groups with which we associate influence our actions. This is often the case even when they are ...
Prejudicial attitudes are widely seen between human groups, with significant consequences. Actions t...
Stereotypes are generalized beliefs about groups of people, which are used to make decisions and jud...
Background: Evolutionary theory suggests prejudice may be a result of the evolution of human sociali...
Existing studies of the multi-group dynamics of prejudiced societies focus on the social- psychologi...
Motivated by cycles of intergroup revenge in real-world conflicts, we experimentally test the hypoth...
In-group favoritism is a central aspect of human behavior. People often help members of their own gr...
Can imagining contact with anti-normative outgroup members be an effective tool for improving interg...
AbstractIndirect reciprocity in which players cooperate with unacquainted other players having good ...
Ethnocentrism is a nearly universal syndrome of attitudes and behaviors, typically including in-grou...
Cultural boundaries have often been the basis for discrimination, nationalism, religious wars, and g...
We propose that people treat prejudice as more legitimate when it seems rationalistic—that is, linke...
When someone expresses prejudice against an outgroup, how negatively do we judge the prejudiced indi...
The present investigation modeled the emergence and persistence of intergroup bias and discriminatio...
Humans exhibit a remarkable capacity for cooperation among genetically unrelated individuals. Yet, h...
The groups with which we associate influence our actions. This is often the case even when they are ...
Prejudicial attitudes are widely seen between human groups, with significant consequences. Actions t...
Stereotypes are generalized beliefs about groups of people, which are used to make decisions and jud...
Background: Evolutionary theory suggests prejudice may be a result of the evolution of human sociali...
Existing studies of the multi-group dynamics of prejudiced societies focus on the social- psychologi...
Motivated by cycles of intergroup revenge in real-world conflicts, we experimentally test the hypoth...
In-group favoritism is a central aspect of human behavior. People often help members of their own gr...
Can imagining contact with anti-normative outgroup members be an effective tool for improving interg...
AbstractIndirect reciprocity in which players cooperate with unacquainted other players having good ...
Ethnocentrism is a nearly universal syndrome of attitudes and behaviors, typically including in-grou...
Cultural boundaries have often been the basis for discrimination, nationalism, religious wars, and g...
We propose that people treat prejudice as more legitimate when it seems rationalistic—that is, linke...
When someone expresses prejudice against an outgroup, how negatively do we judge the prejudiced indi...
The present investigation modeled the emergence and persistence of intergroup bias and discriminatio...
Humans exhibit a remarkable capacity for cooperation among genetically unrelated individuals. Yet, h...
The groups with which we associate influence our actions. This is often the case even when they are ...