Litcius/Paper detail

What matters for cooperation? The importance of social relationship over cognition

Rachel Dale, Sarah Marshall‐Pescini, Friederike Range

2020Scientific Reports35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cooperation is vital for the survival of many species and has been extensively researched at the ultimate level however, there is a considerable degree of variation within a given species in the extent of cooperative behaviours exhibited. Possible factors that have been discussed to contribute to this variation are the social relationship between the cooperating individuals, but also non-social factors such as inhibitory control. Investigating the performance of wolves, a highly cooperative species, in three experimental cooperative tasks; a coordination (string-pulling) task, a prosocial task and an inequity aversion task, we found that the social relationship between the partners had the largest effects on all tasks, while non-social factors (inhibition, learning speed, causal understanding and persistence) had rather unpredicted, or no effects. The results support the potential importance of relational factors, rather than motivation and cognitive abilities, in driving cooperative interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Prosocial behaviorVariation (astronomy)Task (project management)CognitionPsychologyInequity aversionPersistence (discontinuity)Social psychologyCognitive psychologyEconomicsPhysicsNeuroscienceMathematical analysisManagementGeotechnical engineeringAstrophysicsEngineeringInequalityMathematicsAnimal Behavior and ReproductionEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationPrimate Behavior and Ecology