Human interactions often involve a choice between acting selfishly (in ones' own interest) and acting prosocially (in the interest of others). Fast-and-slow models of prosociality posit that people intuitively favour one of these choices (the selfish choice in some models, the prosocial choice in other models), and need to correct this intuition through deliberation in order to make the other choice. We present 7 studies that force us to reconsider this longstanding “corrective” dual process view. Participants played various economic games in which they had to choose between a prosocial and a selfish option. We used a two-response paradigm in which participants had to give their first, initial response under time-pressure and cognitiv...
What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent ...
Prosociality is fundamental to human social life, and, accordingly, much research has attempted to e...
We study the effects of experimental manipulation of decision mode (rational "brain" vs. affective "...
Human interactions often involve a choice between acting selfishly (in ones' own interest) and actin...
Acting on a gut feeling may sometimes lead to poor decisions, but it will usually support the common...
Even though human social behavior has received considerable scientific attention in the last decades...
Human prosociality is often assumed to emerge from exerting reflective control over initial, selfish...
Research using economic decision-making tasks has established that direct reciprocity plays a role i...
Decades of experimental research show that some people forgo personal gains to benefit others in uni...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behavior has received considerable recent attention. Previous work ...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behaviour has received considerable recent attention. Previous work...
Dual-process theories classify a fast, automatic “System 1” and a deliberative, controlled “System 2...
Even though human social behavior has received considerable scientific attention in the last decades...
Is cooperation intuitive or deliberative? From an early notion of cooperation as a deliberate suppre...
A preference for fairness may originate from prosocial or strategic motivations: we may wish to impr...
What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent ...
Prosociality is fundamental to human social life, and, accordingly, much research has attempted to e...
We study the effects of experimental manipulation of decision mode (rational "brain" vs. affective "...
Human interactions often involve a choice between acting selfishly (in ones' own interest) and actin...
Acting on a gut feeling may sometimes lead to poor decisions, but it will usually support the common...
Even though human social behavior has received considerable scientific attention in the last decades...
Human prosociality is often assumed to emerge from exerting reflective control over initial, selfish...
Research using economic decision-making tasks has established that direct reciprocity plays a role i...
Decades of experimental research show that some people forgo personal gains to benefit others in uni...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behavior has received considerable recent attention. Previous work ...
The cognitive basis of prosocial behaviour has received considerable recent attention. Previous work...
Dual-process theories classify a fast, automatic “System 1” and a deliberative, controlled “System 2...
Even though human social behavior has received considerable scientific attention in the last decades...
Is cooperation intuitive or deliberative? From an early notion of cooperation as a deliberate suppre...
A preference for fairness may originate from prosocial or strategic motivations: we may wish to impr...
What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent ...
Prosociality is fundamental to human social life, and, accordingly, much research has attempted to e...
We study the effects of experimental manipulation of decision mode (rational "brain" vs. affective "...