Parochial altruism is decomposed in a tendency to benefit the in-group along with a tendency to ignore, derogate, and harm rivaling out-groups. Building off recent work suggesting that decisions to cooperate can be relatively fast and intuitive, we examine parochial altruism in intergroup conflict when cognitive deliberation is rendered difficult or not. Predictions were tested in an experiment using an incentivized Intergroup Prisoner’s Dilemma-Maximizing Differences Game with 95 subjects classified as either pro-social or pro-self being randomly allocated to high vs. low impulse-control conditions. Results showed, first of all, that self-sacrificial decisions to contribute were made faster than decisions not to contribute, and that faster...
What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent ...
Collective action, or the large-scale cooperation in the pursuit of public goods, has been suggested...
The success of Homo sapiens can in large part be attributed to their highly social nature, and parti...
Parochial cooperation theories assume that strongly self-sacrificing members primarily desire and se...
In intergroup settings, humans often contribute to their in-group at a personal cost. Such parochial...
We investigate parochial altruism, the combination of in-group altruism and out-group hostility, in ...
Prior research on the participation in intergroup conflict suggests that prosocial individuals are p...
What motivates individual self-sacrificial behavior in intergroup conflicts? Is it the altruistic de...
Humans have a stunning capacity for cooperation yet, at the same time, create and escalate conflict ...
This dissertation investigates when people in intergroup conflicts will display universal versus par...
In intergroup conflict, individual cooperation may be directed at strengthening the ingroup, thus un...
We investigate parochial altruism, the combination of in-group altruism and out-group hostility, in ...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
ABSTRACT—What motivates individual self-sacrificial be-havior in intergroup conflicts? Is it the alt...
Is collaboration the fast choice for humans? Past studies proposed that cooperation is a behavioural...
What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent ...
Collective action, or the large-scale cooperation in the pursuit of public goods, has been suggested...
The success of Homo sapiens can in large part be attributed to their highly social nature, and parti...
Parochial cooperation theories assume that strongly self-sacrificing members primarily desire and se...
In intergroup settings, humans often contribute to their in-group at a personal cost. Such parochial...
We investigate parochial altruism, the combination of in-group altruism and out-group hostility, in ...
Prior research on the participation in intergroup conflict suggests that prosocial individuals are p...
What motivates individual self-sacrificial behavior in intergroup conflicts? Is it the altruistic de...
Humans have a stunning capacity for cooperation yet, at the same time, create and escalate conflict ...
This dissertation investigates when people in intergroup conflicts will display universal versus par...
In intergroup conflict, individual cooperation may be directed at strengthening the ingroup, thus un...
We investigate parochial altruism, the combination of in-group altruism and out-group hostility, in ...
To what extent is the tendency to act more prosocially towards ingroup than outgroup members a 'defa...
ABSTRACT—What motivates individual self-sacrificial be-havior in intergroup conflicts? Is it the alt...
Is collaboration the fast choice for humans? Past studies proposed that cooperation is a behavioural...
What is intuitive: pro-social or anti-social behaviour? To answer this fundamental question, recent ...
Collective action, or the large-scale cooperation in the pursuit of public goods, has been suggested...
The success of Homo sapiens can in large part be attributed to their highly social nature, and parti...