Literature DB >> 30201711

Cross-cultural invariances in the architecture of shame.

Daniel Sznycer1,2,3, Dimitris Xygalatas4, Elizabeth Agey5, Sarah Alami5, Xiao-Fen An6, Kristina I Ananyeva7, Quentin D Atkinson8,9, Bernardo R Broitman10, Thomas J Conte11, Carola Flores10, Shintaro Fukushima12, Hidefumi Hitokoto13, Alexander N Kharitonov7, Charity N Onyishi14, Ike E Onyishi15, Pedro P Romero16, Joshua M Schrock17, J Josh Snodgrass17, Lawrence S Sugiyama17, Kosuke Takemura18, Cathryn Townsend11, Jin-Ying Zhuang6, C Athena Aktipis19, Lee Cronk11, Leda Cosmides2,3, John Tooby2,5.   

Abstract

Human foragers are obligately group-living, and their high dependence on mutual aid is believed to have characterized our species' social evolution. It was therefore a central adaptive problem for our ancestors to avoid damaging the willingness of other group members to render them assistance. Cognitively, this requires a predictive map of the degree to which others would devalue the individual based on each of various possible acts. With such a map, an individual can avoid socially costly behaviors by anticipating how much audience devaluation a potential action (e.g., stealing) would cause and weigh this against the action's direct payoff (e.g., acquiring). The shame system manifests all of the functional properties required to solve this adaptive problem, with the aversive intensity of shame encoding the social cost. Previous data from three Western(ized) societies indicated that the shame evoked when the individual anticipates committing various acts closely tracks the magnitude of devaluation expressed by audiences in response to those acts. Here we report data supporting the broader claim that shame is a basic part of human biology. We conducted an experiment among 899 participants in 15 small-scale communities scattered around the world. Despite widely varying languages, cultures, and subsistence modes, shame in each community closely tracked the devaluation of local audiences (mean r = +0.84). The fact that the same pattern is encountered in such mutually remote communities suggests that shame's match to audience devaluation is a design feature crafted by selection and not a product of cultural contact or convergent cultural evolution.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cognition; cooperation; culture; emotion; evolutionary psychology

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30201711      PMCID: PMC6166838          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1805016115

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  36 in total

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Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-02-06       Impact factor: 11.205

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6.  Measurement of social-evaluative anxiety.

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Journal:  Behav Brain Sci       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 12.579

9.  The psychometric properties of the Interpersonal Sensitivity Measure in social anxiety disorder.

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10.  Illness, injury, and disability among Shiwiar forager-horticulturalists: implications of health-risk buffering for the evolution of human life history.

Authors:  Lawrence S Sugiyama
Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 2.868

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6.  Why Do People (Not) Engage in Social Distancing? Proximate and Ultimate Analyses of Norm-Following During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

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Review 7.  New Developments in Emotion-Focused Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder.

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