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MRI Study Shows We're Wired to Cooperate

ibi writes "The NYT reports that humans apparently have an inborne bias towards cooperation. People who cooperated during standard Prisoner's Dilemma tests registered high levels of activity in the pleasure centers of their brains. This result was the opposite of what the researchers were expecting. (But I bet they were testing students rather than their advisers :-)"

6 of 42 comments (clear)

  1. Well yeah. by pagercam2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How could humans have developed a society, the arts and modern civiliation if they wanted to be independant. Of course it feels good to help others and there is security in working as a group, be it cavemen or street kids forming a gang. Humans are social, this seems crazy to assume otherwise. As described in "A Beautiful Mind" which was a pretty good movie but a little too much about mental illness and not the accomplishments of the main character. The main characters "big idea" is that if everyone is out for themselves everyone just ends up fighting each other and everyone looses, if on the other hand you work together and cooperate no one gets the ideal goal but everyone does well and evolution is about survival not being the strongest.

  2. stupid researchers by tps12 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why is this the opposite of what the researchers were expecting? Game theory was not invented by evil capitalists, it was developed to describe observed situations and quantify rational decisions. It is trivial to demonstrate that cooperation (or "tit for tat") is the winningest strategy in an infinitely repeated Prisoner's Dilemma. It should come as no surprise that humans have evolved to choose the winning strategy in such situations.

    Another Prisoner's Dilemma: if a moderator mods me down, and I am insightful, then we both lose (me right now, and the mod in metamoderation). But if he mods me down and I am trolling, then he wins and I lose. And if he mods me up and I am trolling, then I win and he loses. However, if he mods me up and I am insightful, then we break even again.

    So which is it, punk?

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
  3. Try doing the same study with by dh003i · · Score: 4, Funny

    Try doing the same study with lawyers, executives, and politicians. Lets see, put

    Bill Gates
    Steve Jobs
    Hillary Rosen
    Jack Valentini
    Fritz Hollings
    Whaley (from Enron)
    Johny Cochraine
    Gary Wennig (from Global Crossings)

    in a room together. See if they all manage to cooperate.

  4. unexpected? by bob_jenkins · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was skimming "Game Theory Evolving", which walks through various hypotheses for why humans act the way they do. That's the result they came up with, that people are programmed to play tit-for-tat. I'm not sure if the initial bias was towards cooperation, but I think it was.

    I recall that they found that "homo reciprocans", who does to you what you do to them, matched people's behavior best, even in one-time situations where the other guy would never get the chance to do to you what you did to them. Also found that even a small group such people could survive and prosper in a sea of selfish people by sticking together.

    Another result was that people model every situation as analogous to previous situations, and they treat one-time psychological experiments as "us against them", where "them" is the researchers.

  5. Female only study.... by jsimon12 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Uh does this really say much about mens brains? The study was entirely female, other studies have shown that mens and womans brains are very differnt.

  6. A funny story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    In college, we were doing a bit of prisoner's dilemma/game theory in micro-economics. A friend of mine in the class had heard we would be playing a game in class based on this, and that which ever person had the highest point total at the end would win girl scout cookies.

    Well, with that on the line, we set to work. Each time, I would pick cooperate, and he'd choose to screw me over. It was really no surprise that at that point he was in the lead in the class. After this was done, there was a second round using the entire class (and a majority to decide which way things would go), and through a few smart decisions, he cinched it and won the cookies.

    As we were leaving class, a couple said to me (noting my poor performance earlier) "Wow, you're really not very good at that are you?" So, I pulled out my half of the girl scout cookies and laughed and said "I think I did alright."