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Explaining Individual Differences in Advantageous Inequity Aversion by Social-Affective Trait Dimensions and Family Environment

Hongbo Yu, Chunlei Lu, Xiaoxue Gao, Bo Shen, Kui Liu, Weijian Li, Yuqin Xiao, Bo Yang, Xudong Zhao, Molly J. Crockett, Xiaolin Zhou

2021Social Psychological and Personality Science25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Humans are averse to both having less (i.e., disadvantageous inequity aversion [IA]) and having more than others (i.e., advantageous IA). However, the social-affective traits that drive individual differences in IA are not well understood. Here, by combining a modified dictator game and a computational model, we found in a sample of incarcerated adolescents ( N = 67) that callous-unemotional traits were specifically associated with low advantageous but not disadvantageous IA. We replicated and extended the finding in a large-scale university student sample ( N = 2,250) by adopting a dimensional approach to social-affective trait measures. We showed that advantageous IA was strongly and negatively associated with a trait dimension characterized by callousness and lack of social emotions (e.g., guilt and compassion). A supportive family environment negatively correlated with this trait dimension and positively with advantageous IA. These results identify a core set of social-affective dimensions specifically associated with advantageous IA.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyTraitSocial psychologyAltruism (biology)Dictator gameSet (abstract data type)Dimension (graph theory)CompassionDevelopmental psychologyComputer scienceMathematicsPolitical scienceLawProgramming languagePure mathematicsPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentCrime Patterns and InterventionsExperimental Behavioral Economics Studies