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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 19, 2025

A Task for Assessing the Impact of a Partner on the Speed and Accuracy of Motor Performance in Rats
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Partner choice does not predict prosociality across countries.

Scott Claessens1, Thanos Kyritsis1

  • 1School of Psychology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

Evolutionary Human Sciences
|August 17, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human prosociality, or cooperation, does not strongly correlate with partner choice across cultures as predicted. This study challenges evolutionary theories by finding limited evidence for partner choice promoting cooperation globally.

Keywords:
cooperationcross-culturalpartner choiceprosocialityrelational mobility

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Area of Science:

  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Cross-Cultural Psychology
  • Sociology

Background:

  • Evolutionary theories propose partner choice (relational mobility) promotes human cooperation.
  • Previous research often relies on laboratory experiments and limited samples.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To test the association between relational mobility and various prosocial behaviors across diverse countries.
  • To challenge existing evolutionary models of cooperation using large-scale global data.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized Global Preferences Survey (n=27,125) and World Values Survey (n=54,728).
  • Examined relationships between relational mobility and prosociality (altruism, trust, reciprocity, collective action, moral judgments).
  • Controlled for environmental harshness, subsistence style, and geographic/linguistic proximity.

Main Results:

  • Found limited evidence that relational mobility is broadly related to prosociality across countries.
  • Altruism and trust in out-group members showed a positive association with relational mobility.
  • Reciprocity, generalized trust, collective action, and moral judgments were not significantly related to relational mobility.

Conclusions:

  • Findings challenge the central role of partner choice in evolutionary theories of human cooperation.
  • Emphasizes the need for global samples to generalize findings in cooperation research.
  • Suggests alternative or additional mechanisms may drive cross-cultural variations in prosociality.