185 research outputs found

    Global Tracer Facility Longitudinal Global Tracer Survey 2021 (Year 6) - Survey Instrument

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    This survey instrument for the Year 6 Global Tracer Facility (GTF) Global Tracer Survey 2021 outlines the survey sections, area of focus, type of question and response options. The research report based on findings collected using this instrument will be published in June 2022

    GTF Global Tracer Survey 2022 (Year 7) - Survey Instrument Items

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    This survey instrument for the Year 7 Global Tracer Facility (GTF) Global Tracer Survey 2022 outlines the survey sections, area of focus, type of question and response options. The questions in the survey relate to the Australian development scholarship/fellowship which participants have previously completed

    Social image concerns promote cooperation more than altruistic punishment

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    Human cooperation is enigmatic, as organisms are expected, by evolutionary and economic theory, to act principally in their own interests. However, cooperation requires individuals to sacrifice resources for each other’s benefit. We conducted a series of novel experiments in a foraging society where social institutions make the study of social image and punishment particularly salient. Participants played simple cooperation games where they could punish non-cooperators, promote a positive social image or do so in combination with one another. We show that although all these mechanisms raise cooperation above baseline levels, only when social image alone is at stake do average economic gains rise significantly above baseline. Punishment, either alone or combined with social image building, yields lower gains. Individuals’ desire to establish a positive social image thus emerges as a more decisive factor than punishment in promoting human cooperation.We acknowledge financial support from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research through the project ‘BIOACID (03F0655H)’, the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (grant ECO 2011-23634), the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (project ECO 2015-68469-R), the Universidad Jaume I (P1.1B2015-48) and the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. We especially thank our local assistants Eliuda Maravut, Horai Magum, Philippe Hus, Nigel Henry, Saeleah Gordon and Siko Gordon. We thank Vincent Richrath and Irene Jimenez Arribas for research assistance, and Heike Hennig-Schmidt for discussion

    Maternal Exercise Activates Genes Associated with Mitochondrial Biogenesis in Fetal Myocardium of Mouse

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    Maternal exercise during pregnancy has been shown to improve long-term metabolic health on offspring in later life. Mitochondria are the critical site of metabolism, and are inherited by maternal origin. However, the effects of maternal exercise during pregnancy on fetal mitochondrial biogenesis are not well understood. PURPOSE: To test whether maternal exercise can activate genes associate with mitochondrial biogenesis in the fetal heart. METHODS: Female C57BL/6 mice were divided into sedentary and exercise groups. The mice in the exercise group were exposed to voluntary cage-wheel from gestational day 1 through 17, at which time they were sacrificed. Litter size and individual fetal weights (3 days before birth) were taken when pregnant dams were sacrificed. All fetuses were sexed and two to three hearts from same sex within the group were pooled to study gene expression: all data were presented by group since there was no sex difference within group. RESULTS: Exercise dams ran an average of 7.22 ± 0.41km/day until mid-pregnancy and gradually decreased to low levels (1.39 ± 0.43 km/day) through the remainder of gestation. Weight gain during pregnancy was not significantly different between exercise (14.45 ± 0.99g) and sedentary (15.99 ± 1.13g) pregnant dams. There were no significant differences in litter size, sex distribution, and average fetal body weight per litter between sedentary and exercise dams. Genes associated with mitochondrial biogenesis, including Ppargc1a (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, coactivator 1 alpha), Nrf1 (nuclear respiratory factor-1), and Nrf2 (nuclear respiratory factor-2) were significantly upregulated in fetuses from exercise dams. CONCLUSION: Although total kilometers run per day (km/day) were significantly decreased in later stage of pregnancy, maternal exercise initiated at day 1 of gestation significantly increased genes associated with mitochondria biogenesis, indicating that maternal exercise enhances mitochondrial biogenesis and mitochondrial function

    Homo Æqualis: A Cross-Society Experimental Analysis of Three Bargaining Games

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    Data from three bargaining games-the Dictator Game, the Ultimatum Game, and the Third-Party Punishment Game-played in 15 societies are presented. The societies range from US undergraduates to Amazonian, Arctic, and African hunter-gatherers. Behaviour within the games varies markedly across societies. The paper investigates whether this behavioural diversity can be explained solely by variations in inequality aversion. Combining a single parameter utility function with the notion of subgame perfection generates a number of testable predictions. While most of these are supported, there are some telling divergences between theory and data: uncertainty and preferences relating to acts of vengeance may have influenced play in the Ultimatum and Third-Party Punishment Games; and a few subjects used the games as an opportunity to engage in costly signalling.

    “Economic man” in cross-cultural perspective: Behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies

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    Researchers from across the social sciences have found consistent deviations from the predictions of the canonical model of self-interest in hundreds of experiments from around the world. This research, however, cannot determine whether the uniformity results from universal patterns of human behavior or from the limited cultural variation available among the university students used in virtually all prior experimental work. To address this, we undertook a cross-cultural study of behavior in ultimatum, public goods, and dictator games in a range of small-scale societies exhibiting a wide variety of economic and cultural conditions. We found, first, that the canonical model – based on self-interest – fails in all of the societies studied. Second, our data reveal substantially more behavioral variability across social groups than has been found in previous research. Third, group-level differences in economic organization and the structure of social interactions explain a substantial portion of the behavioral variation across societies: the higher the degree of market integration and the higher the payoffs to cooperation in everyday life, the greater the level of prosociality expressed in experimental games. Fourth, the available individual-level economic and demographic variables do not consistently explain game behavior, either within or across groups. Fifth, in many cases experimental play appears to reflect the common interactional patterns of everyday life

    Costly Punishment Across Human Societies

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    Recent behavioral experiments aimed at understanding the evolutionary foundations of human cooperation have suggested that a willingness to engage in costly punishment, even in one-shot situations, may be part of human psychology and a key element in understanding our sociality. However, because most experiments have been confined to students in industrialized societies, generalizations of these insights to the species have necessarily been tentative. Here, experimental results from 15 diverse populations show that (i) all populations demonstrate some willingness to administer costly punishment as unequal behavior increases, (ii) the magnitude of this punishment varies substantially across populations, and (iii) costly punishment positively covaries with altruistic behavior across populations. These findings are consistent with models of the gene-culture coevolution of human altruism and further sharpen what any theory of human cooperation needs to explain

    Markets, Religion, Community Size, and the Evolution of Fairness and Punishment

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    Large-scale societies in which strangers regularly engage in mutually beneficial transactions are puzzling. The evolutionary mechanisms associated with kinship and reciprocity, which underpin much of primate sociality, do not readily extend to large unrelated groups. Theory suggests that the evolution of such societies may have required norms and institutions that sustain fairness in ephemeral exchanges. If that is true, then engagement in larger-scale institutions, such as markets and world religions, should be associated with greater fairness, and larger communities should punish unfairness more. Using three behavioral experiments administered across 15 diverse populations, we show that market integration (measured as the percentage of purchased calories) positively covaries with fairness while community size positively covaries with punishment. Participation in a world religion is associated with fairness, although not across all measures. These results suggest that modern prosociality is not solely the product of an innate psychology, but also reflects norms and institutions that have emerged over the course of human history
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