Like humans, some animals have
evolved a highly developed sense of fairness
Thursday 23 February 2017 00:00
GMT
Humans beings appear to be
hardwired to have a sense of fairness. This is puzzling from an evolutionary
perspective, which you would have thought would mean we were predisposed to
seek advantage for ourselves and our families wherever possible. But in fact a
sense of fairness is important for humans to be able to help each other. Human
cooperation is based on reciprocal altruism – we help people because they’ve
either helped us in the past or they may help us in the future.
Humans beings appear to be
hardwired to have a sense of fairness. This is puzzling from an evolutionary
perspective, which you would have thought would mean we were predisposed to
seek advantage for ourselves and our families wherever possible. But in fact a
sense of fairness is important for humans to be able to help each other. Human
cooperation is based on reciprocal altruism – we help people because they’ve
either helped us in the past or they may help us in the future.
This form of cooperation is only
possible when individuals are able to keep track of other individuals’ efforts
and payoffs – and a sense of fairness helps with this. But what about non-human
animals? Is sense of fairness unique in differentiating humans from other
animals or has it evolved in other non-human animals too?
There’s a way of testing for this
in animals using an “inequity aversion task”. One test subject receives a
reward for completing a task, while an experimental partner gets a “booby
prize” – something they don’t particularly like. You’d imagine that individual
animals that have a strong sense of fair play would either stop taking part in
the experiment or refuse the treat.
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