AI Article Synopsis

  • Third-party punishment (TPP) is when someone who isn’t directly involved in a conflict punishes someone for wrongdoing, and it plays a key role in morality across cultures.
  • Research on male Wistar rats showed that those raised with lots of affection from humans exhibited TPP-like behaviors, while normally raised rats did not.
  • This suggests that TPP might not be exclusive to humans and could actually be a learned behavior that develops in nurturing environments.

Article Abstract

Third-party punishment (TPP) is an altruistic behavior or sense willing to punish transgressors as a third party not directly involved in the transgression. TPP is observed worldwide, regardless of tradition and culture, and is essential for morality in human society. Moreover, even preverbal infants display TPP-like judgement, suggesting that TPP is evolutionarily conserved and innate. Thus, it is possible that non-human animals display TPP-like behavior, although TPP has been said to be human-specific. We investigated whether or not male mature Wistar rats displayed TPP-like behaviors when they witnessed deadly aggression by an unknown aggressive mouse toward another unknown victim mouse. Normally reared rats did not display TPP-like behaviors, but rats reared with extensive affectionate handling by human caretakers as beloved pets contacted the unknown aggressive mice in a gentle manner leading to reduced aggression toward the unknown victim mice, even when the aggressive mice fought back. Furthermore, the handled rats touched unknown rat pups that were drowning in water and anesthesia-induced comatose rats more frequently than control rats. These findings suggest a possibility that TPP is not in fact human-specific and innate but rather an acquired behavior that flourishes in affectionate circumstances.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11436845PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-71748-xDOI Listing

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Sci Rep

September 2024

Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology, Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine, Shitsukawa, Toon, Ehime, 791-0295, Japan.

Article Synopsis
  • Third-party punishment (TPP) is when someone who isn’t directly involved in a conflict punishes someone for wrongdoing, and it plays a key role in morality across cultures.
  • Research on male Wistar rats showed that those raised with lots of affection from humans exhibited TPP-like behaviors, while normally raised rats did not.
  • This suggests that TPP might not be exclusive to humans and could actually be a learned behavior that develops in nurturing environments.
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