社会性
心理学
社会能力
桥接(联网)
生物
社会学习
价值(数学)
社会心理学
社会关系
社会启发式
功能(生物学)
社会变革
认知科学
认知心理学
计算机科学
自然(考古学)
机器学习
经济
考古
历史
生物
进化生物学
经济增长
计算机网络
教育学
生态学
作者
Diana Tamir,Brent Hughes
标识
DOI:10.1177/1745691618776263
摘要
Humans are social creatures, engaging almost constantly in social behaviors that serve ultimate social goals, such as forming strong bonds with one another. However, most social behaviors provide only incremental progress toward an ultimate goal. Instead, the drive to engage in any individual social act may derive from its proximal value rather than its ultimate goal. Thus, this proximal value forms the foundation on which the complexities of human sociality are built. We describe two complementary approaches for using proximal social rewards to understand social behaviors and their ultimate goals: (a) decontextualizing social rewards-paring down complex social interactions can help identify which basic building blocks remain valuable even in minimalistic contexts-and (b) recontextualizing social rewards-reintroducing motivational and contextual factors into the study of social experience can help identify how proximal rewards serve their ultimate function. We discuss how this dual-approach framework can inform future research by bridging basic social building blocks and real-world social goals.
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