Recent studies suggest that cooperative decision-making in one-shot interactions is a history-dependent dynamic process: promoting intuition versus deliberation typically has a positive effect on cooperation (dynamism) among people living in a cooperative setting and with no previous experience in economic games on cooperation (history dependence). Here, we report on a laboratory experiment exploring how these findings transfer to a non-cooperative setting. We find two major results: (i) promoting intuition versus deliberation has no effect on cooperative behaviour among inexperienced subjects living in a non-cooperative setting; (ii) experienced subjects cooperate more than inexperienced subjects, but only under time pressure. These results suggest that cooperation is a learning process, rather than an instinctive impulse or a self-controlled choice, and that experience operates primarily via the channel of intuition. Our findings shed further light on the cognitive basis of human cooperative decision-making and provide further support for the recently proposed social heuristics hypothesis.
Social setting, intuition and experience in laboratory experiments interact to shape cooperative decision-making
Published 2015 in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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- Publication year
2015
- Venue
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
- Publication date
2015-02-02
- Fields of study
Biology, Physics, Computer Science, Economics, Psychology, Medicine
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- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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