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Measuring Attentional Biases for Threat in Children and Adults
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Intergroup Biases in Fear-induced Aggression.

Nobuhiro Mifune1, Dora Simunovic2, Toshio Yamagishi3

  • 1School of Economics and Management, Kochi University of Technology Kochi, Japan.

Frontiers in Psychology
|February 9, 2017
PubMed
Summary

Fear, not spite, drives aggression in minimal groups. Intergroup aggression is psychologically distinct from intragroup cooperation, challenging evolutionary models.

Keywords:
ingroup favoritismintergroup aggressionminimal groupsoutgroup derogationpreemptive strike

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary psychology
  • Behavioral economics
  • Social psychology

Background:

  • The parochial altruism model suggests intragroup cooperation and intergroup aggression co-evolve.
  • This model predicts both cooperation and aggression emerge even in minimal groups.
  • Previous research is mixed on the drivers of intergroup aggression.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate if spite and/or fear motivate costly aggression in a preemptive strike game (PSG).
  • Test if these motivations promote intergroup aggression in minimal groups.
  • Examine the relationship between intragroup cooperation and intergroup aggression.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a newly developed preemptive strike game (PSG) with 176 participants.
  • Participants made real-time decisions on whether to attack an opponent via computer.
  • Minimal groups were used to isolate the effects of group membership.

Main Results:

  • Fear, but not spite, was confirmed to promote intergroup aggression in minimal groups.
  • The rate of intergroup aggression did not depend on the opponent's group membership.
  • Intragroup cooperation emerged, but intergroup aggression did not in minimal groups.

Conclusions:

  • Intergroup aggression appears to rely on psychological mechanisms separate from intragroup cooperation.
  • Findings challenge the co-evolutionary prediction of the parochial altruism model for minimal groups.
  • Results have implications for understanding real-world politics and military strategy.