When and Why Do Third Parties Punish Outside of the Lab? A Cross-Cultural Recall Study

Author:

Pedersen Eric J.1ORCID,McAuliffe William H. B.23,Shah Yashna24,Tanaka Hiroki5,Ohtsubo Yohsuke6ORCID,McCullough Michael E.27

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, CO, USA

2. Department of Psychology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA

3. Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA, USA

4. Independent Researcher, Arlington, VA, USA

5. Brain Research Institute, Tamagawa University, Tokyo, Japan

6. Department of Psychology, Kobe University, Japan

7. Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA

Abstract

Punishment can reform uncooperative behavior and hence could have contributed to humans’ ability to live in large-scale societies. Punishment by unaffected third parties has received extensive scientific scrutiny because third parties punish transgressors in laboratory experiments on behalf of strangers that they will never interact with again. Often overlooked in this research are interactions involving people who are not strangers, which constitute many interactions beyond the laboratory. Across three samples in two countries (United States and Japan; N = 1,294), we found that third parties’ anger at transgressors, and their intervention and punishment on behalf of victims, varied in real-life conflicts as a function of how much third parties valued the welfare of the disputants. Punishment was rare (1–2%) when third parties did not value the welfare of the victim, suggesting that previous economic game results have overestimated third parties’ willingness to punish transgressors on behalf of strangers.

Funder

John Templeton Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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