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Surveillance cues do not enhance altruistic behavior among anonymous strangers in the field. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Altruistic behavior among strangers remains an evolutionary mystery, with one theory suggesting that our evolved psychology promotes kindness even in situations where reciprocity isn't possible.
  • Laboratory studies show that cues like images of watching eyes can enhance altruistic actions, but this may be due to participants wanting to appear good rather than true altruism.
  • A field experiment demonstrated that when participants were unaware of being observed, surveillance cues did not influence their hand hygiene, indicating that such cues only matter when people believe they are being monitored.

Article Abstract

The degree of altruistic behavior among strangers is an evolutionary puzzle. A prominent explanation is the evolutionary legacy hypothesis according to which an evolved reciprocity-based psychology affects behavior even when reciprocity is impossible, i.e., altruistic behavior in such instances is maladaptive. Empirical support for this explanation comes from laboratory experiments showing that surveillance cues, e.g., photographs of watching eyes, increase altruistic behavior. A competing interpretation for this evidence, however, is that the cues signal the experimenter's expectations and participants, aware of being monitored, intentionally behave more altruistically to boost their reputation. Here we report the first results from a field experiment on the topic in which participants are unaware they are being monitored and reciprocity is precluded. The experiment investigates the impact of surveillance cues on a textbook example of altruistic behavior-hand hygiene prior to treating a 'patient'. We find no evidence surveillance cues affect hand hygiene, despite using different measures of hand-hygiene quality and cues that have been previously shown to be effective. We argue that surveillance cues may have an effect only when participants have reasons to believe they are actually monitored. Thus they cannot support claims altruistic behavior between strangers is maladaptive.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6095487PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0197959PLOS

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