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      Deciding Who Is Worthy of Help: Effect of the Probability of Reciprocity on Individuals’ Willingness to Help Others

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      Evolutionary Psychology
      SAGE Publications
      reciprocal altruism, help, compassion, competence, prosociality, checkbox method

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          Abstract

          In order to explain helping strangers in need in terms of reciprocal altruism, it is necessary to ensure that the help is reciprocated and that the costs of helping are thus compensated. Competence and willingness to make sacrifices for the benefactor of the person being helped are important cues for ensuring a return on help because reciprocity would not be possible if the person being helped had neither the competence nor the inclination to give back in the future. In this study, we used vignettes and manipulated the cause of suffering strangers’ difficulties and prosociality to investigate participants’ compassion for and willingness to help the stranger. In Study 1, we measured willingness to help by using hypothetical helping behaviors that were designed to vary in cost. In Study 2, we measured willingness to help by using the checkbox method in which participants were asked to sequentially check 10 × 10 checkboxes on a webpage, which asked the participants to pay a small but real cost. In both studies, the controllability of the cause and the prosociality were found to independently affect compassion. These two factors also independently affected willingness to help, as measured by both the hypothetical questions and the checkbox method. We consequently discussed the reasons for the independent processing of the competence and behavioral tendency cues.

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          The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I.

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            The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism

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              Universal dimensions of social cognition: warmth and competence.

              Like all perception, social perception reflects evolutionary pressures. In encounters with conspecifics, social animals must determine, immediately, whether the "other" is friend or foe (i.e. intends good or ill) and, then, whether the "other" has the ability to enact those intentions. New data confirm these two universal dimensions of social cognition: warmth and competence. Promoting survival, these dimensions provide fundamental social structural answers about competition and status. People perceived as warm and competent elicit uniformly positive emotions and behavior, whereas those perceived as lacking warmth and competence elicit uniform negativity. People classified as high on one dimension and low on the other elicit predictable, ambivalent affective and behavioral reactions. These universal dimensions explain both interpersonal and intergroup social cognition.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Evol Psychol
                Evol Psychol
                EVP
                spevp
                Evolutionary Psychology
                SAGE Publications (Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA )
                1474-7049
                28 May 2024
                Apr-Jun 2024
                : 22
                : 2
                : 14747049241254725
                Affiliations
                [1-14747049241254725]Graduate School of Engineering, Ringgold 12982, universityNagoya Institute of Technology; , Nagoya, Japan
                Author notes
                [*]Ryo Oda, Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya Institute of Technology, Gokiso-cho, Showa-ku, Nagoya 466-8555, Japan. Email: oda.ryo@ 123456nitech.ac.jp
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2228-7455
                Article
                10.1177_14747049241254725
                10.1177/14747049241254725
                11138187
                38807479
                851860b7-3c29-47a0-ab1c-0aa1c8b980c9
                © The Author(s) 2024

                This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page ( https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).

                History
                : 11 April 2023
                : 8 April 2024
                : 29 April 2024
                Funding
                Funded by: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001691;
                Award ID: KAKENHI Grant Number 20H01755
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                ts19
                April-June 2024

                reciprocal altruism,help,compassion,competence,prosociality,checkbox method

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