Literature DB >> 26580018

The ontogeny of fairness in seven societies.

P R Blake1, K McAuliffe2,3,4, J Corbit5, T C Callaghan6, O Barry7, A Bowie4,8, L Kleutsch8, K L Kramer9, E Ross4, H Vongsachang4,8, R Wrangham4, F Warneken8.   

Abstract

A sense of fairness plays a critical role in supporting human cooperation. Adult norms of fair resource sharing vary widely across societies, suggesting that culture shapes the acquisition of fairness behaviour during childhood. Here we examine how fairness behaviour develops in children from seven diverse societies, testing children from 4 to 15 years of age (n = 866 pairs) in a standardized resource decision task. We measured two key aspects of fairness decisions: disadvantageous inequity aversion (peer receives more than self) and advantageous inequity aversion (self receives more than a peer). We show that disadvantageous inequity aversion emerged across all populations by middle childhood. By contrast, advantageous inequity aversion was more variable, emerging in three populations and only later in development. We discuss these findings in relation to questions about the universality and cultural specificity of human fairness.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26580018     DOI: 10.1038/nature15703

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  48 in total

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8.  Me first: Neural representations of fairness during three-party interactions.

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10.  Theory of Mind and Resource Allocation in the Context of Hidden Inequality.

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