Title: Aggression between groups Session 8
1Aggression between groups Session 8
2Exercise Which movies do you like best?
- Action Adventure
- Comedy
- Drama
- Romantic
- Science Fiction
- War
- Westerns
- Please rank from 1 (like best) to 7 (like least)
3Questions
- What are the origins of intergroup conflict in
humans? - Is there any evidence in the social psychological
literature for an evolved intergroup psychology? - How can intergroup relations in society be
improved?
4Exercise
- You are a member of the Blue/Red team. You have
10 to divide. How much do you give to a member
of the Blue team and the Red team?
5- A tribe including many members who, from
possessing in high degree the spirit of
patriotism, fidelity, obedience, courage and
sympathy, were always ready to aid one another,
and to sacrifice themselves for the common good,
would be victorious over most tribes and this
would be natural selection -
- -- Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man (1871)
6Evolutionary analysis of intergroup psychology
- Group living has given rise to adaptations for
- Aggression, harming others at personal gain
(Buss, 1999) - Altruism, helping others at personal cost (Van
Vugt Van Lange, 2006) - For early humans, there was an increased threat
from rival groups (Alexander, 1987) - Intergroup conflict selected for
- within group cooperation (altruism) for the
purpose of achieving between group victory
(Alexander, 1979 DeWaal, 1996 Tooby Cosmides,
1988) - Within group altruism is promoted and
aggression is suppressed (ingroup morality) - Between group altruism is suppressed and
aggression is promoted (outgroup morality) - The likely outcome of these selection pressures
is unique evolved intergroup psychology among
humans -
7s
8How might intergroup psychology have evolved?
- Individual selection aggression towards
outgroup members might benefit individual
directly - because they threaten you personally
- because you get status and esteem in your
ingroup (indirect reciprocity costly
signalling) among Yanomano, warriors have
greater status and multiple sexual partners
(Chagnon, 1997) - But then how do you explain that people sometimes
are willing to give their lives to defend their
group? - Through kin selection (Hamilton, 1964)
- helping ingroup member (relative) by harming
outgroup member (non-relative) might pay off,
according to Hamiltons rule (suicide attacks) - Through group or multilevel selection (Wilson,
1994 2002) - For men, likely to be stronger selection for
intergroup aggression than for women, this is
known as the male soldier hypothesis (van Vugt et
al.), - But why?
9Multilevel selection theory (Wilson, 2002)
- Any biological system is a hierarchy of units
- Genes reside within individuals, which reside
within groups, which reside in metapopulations - At every level (genes, individuals, groups)
natural selection can occur in theory - When natural selection operates at a given level,
it promotes traits that increase the relative
fitness of units at that level (but these traits
may be maladaptive at a different level) - For example, the gene that cooperates with other
genes sacrifices itself for the sake of the
organism - For example, cheaters do well in terms of
individual fitness, but groups with many cheaters
do bad at the level of the group
10Multilevel selection as pathway to intergroup
behaviour
- Behaviours that favour ones group but are not
costly to oneself can evolve without any problem
for example, conformity - What about group behaviour that are personally
costly, like defending your group? - This is open to the cheater problem
- selfish individuals (those that do not defend
their group) may produce more offspring than
altruists (who help to defend their group), but
groups with more altruists might produce more
offspring than groups with fewer altruists, so
the total number of altruists may remain stable
in a population - For this to be the case there must be serious
intergroup level competition, and groups must
also periodically go extinct or reform (in order
to prevent non-altruists from taking over the
group) - Does this theory apply to humans??????? That is
the 1million question!
11Social psychological theories of intergroup
conflict
- Realistic conflict theory (Campbell, 1965)
integroup conflict is caused by competition among
groups over limited resources (e.g., food,
territory) - Social identity theory (Tajfel Turner, 1976)
categorization (between us vs. them) is a
sufficient cause of conflict - An evolutionary perspective can easily integrate
these theories
12The social psychological literature
Predictions based on evolved intergroup
hypothesis
- Intergroup conflict is common in humans (now and
certainly in the past) - Coalitions between people should be relatively
flexible i.e., groups should frequently
experience change (disband, reform) - People should be able to quickly identify with a
group - They should have a capacity to form deep
emotional attachments to groups - People should prefer to harm outgroup members
over ingroup members - People should prefer to help ingroup over
outgroup members - People should be willing help their ingroup
without necessarily expecting a direct return
(multilevel selection does not require individual
benefits, but group benefits) - People should be willing to harm those who
threaten the ingroup without expecting a return - Men are more likely to engage in intergroup
aggression than women (male soldier hypothesis)
13Exercise
- Recall last monthss interactions that you had
with other people how many aggressive
interactions (conflicts, threats, physical
aggression) did you have? - How many of these were
- One-on-one
- Within group
- Group-on-group
141. There should be frequent examples of
intergroup competition among humans, now and in
the past
- War is an exclusively human activity (Buss, 1999
Tooby Cosmides, 1988) - Our closest genetic relative, the chimpanzee, do
it as well (Boehm, 1999 De Waal, 1996 Wrangham
Peterson, 1996) especially males - Competition between groups is common in modern
society, in sports, businesses, universities, - People are more competitive in intergroup than
interindividual situations - When researchers examined every day social
activities, they found that group-on-group
interactions are more competitive than one-on-one
activities (Pemberton, Insko Schopler, 1996) - Intergroup relations are more competitive than
interpersonal relations in Prisoners Dilemma
Games (Insko, Schopler, 1998)
15The Prisoners dilemma
162. Coalitions between people should be
relatively flexible i.e., groups should
frequently experience change (disband, reform)
- Group fissions and schisms are quite common (Hart
Van Vugt, 2006) - Groups also regularly go extinct and reform
(religious cults, Sosis Wilson, 2002 New Guinea
tribes Boyd Richerson, 2002)
173. People are able to quickly identify with a
group
- Minimal group paradigm research (Brewer, 1979)
shows that participants give more money to
ingroup than outgroup members, even if group
membership is based on trivial criterion (like
art preference or flip of coin) Tajfel Turner,
1986) - Allocation into different groups undermines
existing friendships (Sherif et al., 1961
Robbers cave experiments)
184. Individuals should be capable of forming deep
emotional attachments to groups
- Ingroup members are loyal to their group, even
when loyalty is quite costly (Van Vugt Hart,
2004) - Friendships are more likely to form within groups
than between groups - Employees who identify with their organization
are more likely to stay (Abrams et al., 1986) - Some fans do not sleep after their favourite team
has lost - Or, the get a heart attack while watching a
football game on TV (Lancet) - People are sometimes prepared to die for their
country (Keegan, 1994) religion, or other cause
(Atran, 2002)
195. Group members should want to harm outgroup
members more than ingroup members
- How would you test this idea in an experiment?
205. Group members should want to harm outgroup
members more than ingroup members
- Minimal group research
- Ingroup members think all outgroup members are
untrustworthy and they are alike (outgroup
homogeneity effect Judd Park, 1988) - They also derogate outgroups (Doosje et al.,
1998) - They feel Schadenfreude when a rival group loses
(Leach et al., 2002) - Group members tend to make sweeping statements
about an entire outgroup (stereotyping Quattrone
Jones, 1980) - Ingroup members morally justify aggressive
actions against outgroup members (Yamagishi,
2002) - Ingroup members dehumanize outgroup members
(Leyens, Yzerbyt et al.) , which may be regarded
as a precursor of outgroup aggression (genocide)
216. Group members should prefer to help ingroup
over outgroup members
- Minimal group paradigm research
- Even selfish people show altruism towards their
ingroup in an integroup competition (De Cremer
Van Vugt, 1999) - People cooperate more when an ingroup identity is
made salient (Brewer Kramer, 1986)
227. Group members should willingly engage in
helping the group without necessarily expecting a
return
- Group identification is not mediated by feelings
of trust or reciprocity (Brewer, 1991 De Cremer
Van Vugt, 1999)
238. Group members should willingly engage in
harming individuals that threaten to harm the
group without expecting a return
- People readily sign up as soldiers when their
country is in war (Stern, 1995) - Suicide bombers do not expect a return (at least
not during their lives) - Group members readily punish ingroup members that
are selfish (Fehr Fischbacher, 2003) or
disloyal to the group (Van Vugt Chang, 2005) - Research on black sheep effect (Marques, Leyens,
Yzerbyt) - Research on scapegoating and mob lynching
249. The male soldier hypothesis Mens psychology
is more strongly affected by intergroup threat
25What Can Be Done About Intergroup Conflict?
- Break down the barriers between groups
- Intergroup Contact (Allport, 1954)
- Encounters between members of different groups
- Cooperative goals
- Same status individuals
- Institutional support
- Successful team performance
- School integration
- Friendships
- Multiracial marriages
- Cognitive cures Decategorization,
recategorization, cross-categorization how
effective are they? - Perhaps focus on men in particular?
26Take-home message
- Human history is characterized by intergroup
competition - As a consequence, humans have an evolved
intergroup psychology, which enables them to form
attachments to ingroups (of kin and nonkin), and
discriminate against outgroups - The social psychology literature provides a lot
of evidence for a domain-specific evolved
intergroup psychology - Evolutionary thinking suggests that intergroup
conflict is more likely to emerge if there is
competition between groups (for resources or
prestige) it is thus in line with both social
identity (Tajfel), and realistic group conflict
(Campbell) accounts of intergroup behavior.
27(No Transcript)
28Evolutionary psychology and warfare (risk
contract of war hypothesis Tooby Cosmides,
1988)
- The average long-term gain in reproductive
resource must be sufficiently large to outweigh
the reproductive costs of engaging in warfare
over evolutionary time - Members of coalitions must believe their group
will emerge victorious - The risk that each member takes and the
importance of each members contribution to the
success must translate into a corresponding share
of benefits - People who go into battle must be cloaked into a
veil of ignorance about who will live or die
29Predictions from warfare hypothesis
- Men but not women will have evolved psychological
mechanisms designed for warfare - Sexual access to women ill be the primary benefit
for men - Men should have evolved psychological mechanisms
to panic or defect in the face of death - Men should be more likely to go to war when the
odds of success are better - Men should have evolved psychological mechanisms
to enforce risk contract - Men should have evolved psychological mechanisms
- designed to detect, prefer and enlist men in the
coalition who are willing to and able to
contribute to its success.