It is still debated how altruistic punishment as one form of strong reciprocity has established during evolution and which motives may underlie such behavior. Recent neuroscientific evidence on the activation of brain reward regions during altruistic punishment in two-person one-shot exchange games suggests satisfaction through the punishment of norm violations as one underlying motive. In order to address this issue in more detail, we used fMRI during a one-shot economic exchange game that warrants strong reciprocity by introducing a third party punishment condition wherein revenge is unlikely to play a role. We report here that indeed, reward regions such as the nucleus accumbens showed punishment-related activation. Moreover, we provide ...
Punishment in economic games has been interpreted as “altruistic.” However, it was shown that punish...
Animals, in particular humans, frequently punish other individuals who behave negatively or uncooper...
Evolutionary altruism (defined in terms of fitness effects) exists in the context of punishment in a...
It is still debated how altruistic punishment as one form of strong reciprocity has established duri...
Altruistic punishment following social norm violations promotes human cooperation. However, experime...
Reciprocal fairness, in the form of punishment and reward, is at the core of human societal order. I...
Individuals who violate social norms will most likely face social punishment sanctions. Those sancti...
Punishment in economic games has been interpreted as “altruistic.” However, it was shown that punish...
Altruistic punishment is very common in human life, which is an effective mechanism enforcing group ...
Humans altruistically punish violators of social norms to enforce cooperation and pro-social behavio...
Second-party punishment (SPP) and third-party punishment (TPP) are two basic forms of costly punishm...
Explaining the evolution and maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individuals is one of the fu...
Cooperation based on reciprocal altruism has evolved in only a small number of species, yet it const...
AbstractCooperation based on reciprocal altruism has evolved in only a small number of species, yet ...
Human altruistic behaviors are heterogeneous across both contexts and people, whereas the neural s...
Punishment in economic games has been interpreted as “altruistic.” However, it was shown that punish...
Animals, in particular humans, frequently punish other individuals who behave negatively or uncooper...
Evolutionary altruism (defined in terms of fitness effects) exists in the context of punishment in a...
It is still debated how altruistic punishment as one form of strong reciprocity has established duri...
Altruistic punishment following social norm violations promotes human cooperation. However, experime...
Reciprocal fairness, in the form of punishment and reward, is at the core of human societal order. I...
Individuals who violate social norms will most likely face social punishment sanctions. Those sancti...
Punishment in economic games has been interpreted as “altruistic.” However, it was shown that punish...
Altruistic punishment is very common in human life, which is an effective mechanism enforcing group ...
Humans altruistically punish violators of social norms to enforce cooperation and pro-social behavio...
Second-party punishment (SPP) and third-party punishment (TPP) are two basic forms of costly punishm...
Explaining the evolution and maintenance of cooperation among unrelated individuals is one of the fu...
Cooperation based on reciprocal altruism has evolved in only a small number of species, yet it const...
AbstractCooperation based on reciprocal altruism has evolved in only a small number of species, yet ...
Human altruistic behaviors are heterogeneous across both contexts and people, whereas the neural s...
Punishment in economic games has been interpreted as “altruistic.” However, it was shown that punish...
Animals, in particular humans, frequently punish other individuals who behave negatively or uncooper...
Evolutionary altruism (defined in terms of fitness effects) exists in the context of punishment in a...