Abstract

Humans involved in cooperative interactions willingly pay a cost to punish cheats. However, the proximate motives underpinning punitive behaviour are currently debated. Individuals who interact with cheats experience losses, but they also experience lower payoffs than the cheating partner. Thus, the negative emotions that trigger punishment may stem from a desire to reciprocate losses or from inequity aversion. Previous studies have not disentangled these possibilities. Here, we use an experimental approach to ask whether punishment is motivated by inequity aversion or by a desire for reciprocity. We show that humans punish cheats only when cheating produces disadvantageous inequity, while there is no evidence for reciprocity. This finding challenges the notion that punishment is motivated by a simple desire to reciprocally harm cheats and shows that victims compare their own payoffs with those of partners when making punishment decisions.

Highlights

  • Punishment is a costly behaviour that is often aimed at individuals who cheat during social interactions

  • In this experiment, the loss experienced by player 1 (P1) as a result of player 2 (P2) cheating was the same ($0.20) across all

  • Treatments but P1 only punished P2 when P2 cheating resulted in P1 experiencing lower relative payoffs

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Summary

Evolutionary biology

Human punishment is motivated by inequity aversion, not a desire for reciprocity. Individuals who interact with cheats experience losses, but they experience lower payoffs than the cheating partner. The negative emotions that trigger punishment may stem from a desire to reciprocate losses or from inequity aversion. We use an experimental approach to ask whether punishment is motivated by inequity aversion or by a desire for reciprocity. We show that humans punish cheats only when cheating produces disadvantageous inequity, while there is no evidence for reciprocity. This finding challenges the notion that punishment is motivated by a simple desire to reciprocally harm cheats and shows that victims compare their own payoffs with those of partners when making punishment decisions

INTRODUCTION
MATERIAL AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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