The Costs of Benefits: Help-Refusals Highlight Key Trade-Offs of Social Life
- 1 May 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Personality and Social Psychology Review
- Vol. 12 (2) , 118-140
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1088868308315700
Abstract
Social living provides opportunities for cooperative interdependence and concomitant opportunities to obtain help from others in times of need. Nevertheless, people frequently refuse help from others, even when it would be beneficial. Decisions to accept or reject aid offers may provide a window into the adaptive trade-offs recipients make between costs and benefits in different key domains of social life. Following from evolutionary and ecological perspectives, we consider how help-recipient decision making might reflect qualitatively different threats to goal attainment within six fundamental domains of social life (coalition formation, status, self-protection, mate acquisition, mate retention, and familial care). Accepting help from another person is likely to involve very different threats and opportunities depending on which domains are currently active. This approach can generate a variety of novel empirical predictions and suggest new implications for the delivery of aid.Keywords
This publication has 131 references indexed in Scilit:
- Punishing free riders: direct and indirect promotion of cooperationEvolution and Human Behavior, 2007
- The architecture of human kin detectionNature, 2007
- What you don’t know won’t hurt me: Costly (but quiet) exit in dictator gamesPublished by Elsevier ,2005
- Material priming: The influence of mundane physical objects on situational construal and competitive behavioral choiceOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2004
- Biobehavioral responses to stress in females: Tend-and-befriend, not fight-or-flight.Psychological Review, 2000
- Facial Expressions of Emotion: Are Angry Faces Detected More Efficiently?Cognition and Emotion, 2000
- The Interpretation of Semantic Category-specific Deficits: What Do They Reveal About the Organization of Conceptual Knowledge in the Brain?Neurocase, 1998
- Perspectives on Obedience to Authority: The Legacy of the Milgram ExperimentsJournal of Social Issues, 1995
- The four elementary forms of sociality: Framework for a unified theory of social relations.Psychological Review, 1992
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964