Beliefs about others' intentions determine whether cooperation is the faster choice

Article


Castro Santa, J., Exadaktylos, F. and Soto-Faraco, S. 2018. Beliefs about others' intentions determine whether cooperation is the faster choice. Scientific Reports. 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-25926-3
TypeArticle
TitleBeliefs about others' intentions determine whether cooperation is the faster choice
AuthorsCastro Santa, J., Exadaktylos, F. and Soto-Faraco, S.
Abstract

Is collaboration the fast choice for humans? Past studies proposed that cooperation is a behavioural default, based on Response Times (RT) findings. Here we contend that the individual’s reckoning of the immediate social environment shapes her predisposition to cooperate and, hence, response latencies. In a social dilemma game, we manipulate the beliefs about the partner’s intentions to cooperate and show that they act as a switch that determines cooperation and defection RTs; when the partner’s intention to cooperate is perceived as high, cooperation choices are speeded up, while defection is slowed down. Importantly, this social context effect holds across varying expected payoffs, indicating that it modulates behaviour regardless of choices’ similarity in monetary terms. Moreover, this pattern is moderated by individual variability in social preferences: Among conditional cooperators, high cooperation beliefs speed up cooperation responses and slow down defection. Among free-riders, defection is always faster and more likely than cooperation, while high cooperation beliefs slow down all decisions. These results shed new light on the conflict of choices account of response latencies, as well as on the intuitive cooperation hypothesis, and can help to correctly interpret and reconcile previous, apparently contradictory results, by considering the role of context in social dilemmas.

PublisherNature Publishing Group
JournalScientific Reports
ISSN2045-2322
Publication dates
Online14 May 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited01 Jun 2018
Accepted30 Apr 2018
Output statusPublished
Publisher's version
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Additional information

Article number = 7509

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-25926-3
LanguageEnglish
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