Monitoring, reputation, and 'greenbeard' reciprocity in a Shuar work team

被引:30
作者
Price, ME
机构
[1] Indiana Univ, Workshop Polit Theory & Policy Anal, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
[2] Santa Fe Inst, Santa Fe, NM 87501 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1002/job.347
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
A collective action (CA), i.e., a group of individuals jointly producing a resource to be shared equally among themselves, is a common interaction in organizational contexts. Ancestral humans who were predisposed to cooperate in CAs would have risked being disadvantaged compared to free riders, but could have overcome this disadvantage through 'greenbeard' reciprocity, that is, by assessing the extent to which co-interactants were also predisposed towards cooperation, and then cooperating to the extent that they expected co-interactants to reciprocate. Assessment of others' cooperativeness could have been based on the direct monitoring of, and on reputational information about, others' cooperativeness. This theory predicts that (1) CA participants should monitor accurately, and (2) perceived higher-cooperators should have better reputations. These predictions were supported in a study of real-life CAs carried out by a group of Shuar hunter-horticulturalists: (1) members accurately distinguished 'intentional' non-cooperators (who could have cooperated but chose not to) from 'accidental' non-cooperators (who were unable to cooperate), and their perceptions of co-member cooperativeness accurately reflected more objective measures of this cooperativeness; and (2) perceived intentional cooperators had better reputations than perceived intentional non-cooperators. These results have direct applications in organizational contexts, for example, for increasing cooperativeness in self-directed work teams. Copyright (c) 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:201 / 219
页数:19
相关论文
共 89 条
[41]   Cultural group selection, coevolutionary processes and large-scale cooperation [J].
Henrich, J .
JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2004, 53 (01) :3-35
[42]  
Henrich J., 2004, Foundations of human sociality: economic experiments and ethnographic evidence from fifteen small-scale societies, P125
[43]  
Humphrey N, 1997, SOC RES, V64, P199
[44]   Institutions, intergroup competition, and the evolution of hotel populations around Niagara Falls [J].
Ingram, P ;
Inman, C .
ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY, 1996, 41 (04) :629-658
[45]   The experience and evolution of trust: Implications for cooperation and teamwork [J].
Jones, GR ;
George, JM .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 1998, 23 (03) :531-546
[46]   Trust and distrust in organizations: Emerging perspectives, enduring questions [J].
Kramer, RM .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 50 :569-598
[47]   Experiments investigating cooperative types in humans: A complement to evolutionary theory and simulations [J].
Kurzban, R ;
Houser, D .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2005, 102 (05) :1803-1807
[48]   Incremental commitment and reciprocity in a real-time public goods game [J].
Kurzban, R ;
McCabe, K ;
Smith, VL ;
Wilson, BJ .
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 2001, 27 (12) :1662-1673
[49]  
Langfred CW, 2004, ACAD MANAGE J, V47, P385, DOI [10.5465/20159588, 10.2307/20159588]
[50]  
Ledyard J., 1995, HDB EXPT EC, P111, DOI DOI 10.3987/CONTENTS-12-85-7