Infants expect some degree of positive and negative reciprocity between strangers.

Nat Commun

Department of Psychology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 603 East Daniel Street, Champaign, IL, 61820, US.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers investigated if 15-month-old infants expect positive and negative reciprocity between strangers during social interactions.
  • The study found that infants were surprised when an agent did not reciprocate the action (positive or negative) of another agent, indicating an expectation of reciprocal behavior.
  • The findings suggest that even at a young age, infants have an understanding of reciprocity, supporting theories that such behaviors are rooted in evolved psychological systems.

Article Abstract

Social scientists from different disciplines have long argued that direct reciprocity plays an important role in regulating social interactions between unrelated individuals. Here, we examine whether 15-month-old infants (N = 160) already expect direct positive and negative reciprocity between strangers. In violation-of-expectation experiments, infants watch successive interactions between two strangers we refer to as agent1 and agent2. After agent1 acts positively toward agent2, infants are surprised if agent2 acts negatively toward agent1 in a new context. Similarly, after agent1 acts negatively toward agent2, infants are surprised if agent2 acts positively toward agent1 in a new context. Both responses are eliminated when agent2's actions are not knowingly directed at agent1. Additional results indicate that infants view it as acceptable for agent2 either to respond in kind to agent1 or to not engage with agent1 further. By 15 months of age, infants thus already expect a modicum of reciprocity between strangers: Initial positive or negative actions are expected to set broad limits on reciprocal actions. This research adds weight to long-standing claims that direct reciprocity helps regulate interactions between unrelated individuals and, as such, is likely to depend on psychological systems that have evolved to support reciprocal reasoning and behavior.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11375034PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-51982-7DOI Listing

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