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Social performance cues induce behavioral flexibility in humans. | LitMetric

Social performance cues induce behavioral flexibility in humans.

Front Psychol

Behavioural Biology, Department of Biology and Helmholtz Institute, Utrecht University Utrecht, Netherlands.

Published: November 2011

Behavioral flexibility allows individuals to react to environmental changes, but changing established behavior carries costs, with unknown benefits. Individuals may thus modify their behavioral flexibility according to the prevailing circumstances. Social information provided by the performance level of others provides one possible cue to assess the potential benefits of changing behavior, since out-performance in similar circumstances indicates that novel behaviors (innovations) are potentially useful. We demonstrate that social performance cues, in the form of previous players' scores in a problem-solving computer game, influence behavioral flexibility. Participants viewed only performance indicators, not the innovative behavior of others. While performance cues (high, low, or no scores) had little effect on innovation discovery rates, participants that viewed high scores increased their utilization of innovations, allowing them to exploit the virtual environment more effectively than players viewing low or no scores. Perceived conspecific performance can thus shape human decisions to adopt novel traits, even when the traits employed cannot be copied. This simple mechanism, social performance feedback, could be a driver of both the facultative adoption of innovations and cumulative cultural evolution, processes critical to human success.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3139953PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00160DOI Listing

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