TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross-cultural invariances in the architecture of shame
AU - Sznycer, Daniel
AU - Xygalatas, Dimitris
AU - Agey, Elizabeth
AU - Alami, Sarah
AU - An, Xiao Fen
AU - Ananyeva, Kristina I.
AU - Atkinson, Quentin D.
AU - Broitman, Bernardo R.
AU - Conte, Thomas J.
AU - Flores, Carola
AU - Fukushima, Shintaro
AU - Hitokoto, Hidefumi
AU - Kharitonov, Alexander N.
AU - Onyishi, Charity N.
AU - Onyishi, Ike E.
AU - Romero, Pedro P.
AU - Schrock, Joshua M.
AU - Snodgrass, J. Josh
AU - Sugiyama, Lawrence S.
AU - Takemura, Kosuke
AU - Townsend, Cathryn
AU - Zhuang, Jin Ying
AU - Aktipis, C. Athena
AU - Cronk, Lee
AU - Cosmides, Leda
AU - Tooby, John
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
PY - 2018/9/25
Y1 - 2018/9/25
N2 - Human foragers are obligately group-living, and their high dependence on mutual aid is believed to have characterized our species' social evolution. It was therefore a central adaptive problem for our ancestors to avoid damaging thewillingness of other groupmembers to render them assistance. Cognitively, this requires a predictive map of the degree to which others would devalue the individual based on each of various possible acts. With such a map, an individual can avoid socially costly behaviors by anticipating how much audience devaluation a potential action (e.g., stealing) would cause and weigh this against the action's direct payoff (e.g., acquiring). The shame system manifests all of the functional properties required to solve this adaptive problem, with the aversive intensity of shame encoding the social cost. Previous data from three Western(ized) societies indicated that the shame evoked when the individual anticipates committing various acts closely tracks the magnitude of devaluation expressed by audiences in response to those acts. Here we report data supporting the broader claim that shame is a basic part of human biology.We conducted an experiment among 899 participants in 15 small-scale communities scattered around the world. Despite widely varying languages, cultures, and subsistence modes, shame in each community closely tracked the devaluation of local audiences (mean r = +0.84). The fact that the same pattern is encountered in such mutually remote communities suggests that shame's match to audience devaluation is a design feature crafted by selection and not a product of cultural contact or convergent cultural evolution.
AB - Human foragers are obligately group-living, and their high dependence on mutual aid is believed to have characterized our species' social evolution. It was therefore a central adaptive problem for our ancestors to avoid damaging thewillingness of other groupmembers to render them assistance. Cognitively, this requires a predictive map of the degree to which others would devalue the individual based on each of various possible acts. With such a map, an individual can avoid socially costly behaviors by anticipating how much audience devaluation a potential action (e.g., stealing) would cause and weigh this against the action's direct payoff (e.g., acquiring). The shame system manifests all of the functional properties required to solve this adaptive problem, with the aversive intensity of shame encoding the social cost. Previous data from three Western(ized) societies indicated that the shame evoked when the individual anticipates committing various acts closely tracks the magnitude of devaluation expressed by audiences in response to those acts. Here we report data supporting the broader claim that shame is a basic part of human biology.We conducted an experiment among 899 participants in 15 small-scale communities scattered around the world. Despite widely varying languages, cultures, and subsistence modes, shame in each community closely tracked the devaluation of local audiences (mean r = +0.84). The fact that the same pattern is encountered in such mutually remote communities suggests that shame's match to audience devaluation is a design feature crafted by selection and not a product of cultural contact or convergent cultural evolution.
KW - Cognition
KW - Cooperation
KW - Culture
KW - Emotion
KW - Evolutionary psychology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85054015349&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1805016115
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1805016115
M3 - Article
C2 - 30201711
AN - SCOPUS:85054015349
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 115
SP - 9702
EP - 9707
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 39
ER -