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- Title
Does effort influence inequity aversion in cotton-top tamarins ( Saguinus oedipus)?
- Authors
McAuliffe, Katherine; Shelton, Natalie; Stone, Lauren
- Abstract
The human sense of fairness entails sensitivity not just to equality, the equal division of resources, but also to merit, the relationship between an individual's share of resources and how hard they worked for their share. Recent evidence suggests that our sensitivity to equality has deep phylogenetic roots: several nonhuman animal species show an aversion to unequal reward distributions. However, the extent to which nonhuman animals share sensitivity to merit remains poorly understood, largely because previous studies have failed to properly manipulate work effort in inequity aversion tasks. Here, we tested whether cotton-top tamarins ( Saguinus oedipus) would exhibit a differential response to inequity when acquiring rewards was either (1) effortful or (2) effortless. Subjects engaged in a pulling task in which they had an opportunity to deliver a disadvantageously unequal distribution of food to themselves and a partner (one piece for self, four pieces for partner). We made delivery effortful by adding a weight to the pulling handle. Critically, effort was calibrated to each individual. Results show that individuals varied markedly in their response to effort, highlighting the importance of manipulating work effort at the individual level. Overall, subjects showed little aversion to inequity. However, subjects were slightly less likely to accept inequity when doing so was effortful, although this effect was pronounced in only one individual. Our findings suggest a new method for capturing individual variation in effort and for studying the roots of the concept of merit in nonhuman animals.
- Subjects
COTTONTOP tamarin; PHYLOGENY; ANIMAL psychology testing; FAIRNESS; ANIMAL species; ANIMAL behavior
- Publication
Animal Cognition, 2014, Vol 17, Issue 6, p1289
- ISSN
1435-9448
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10071-014-0764-x