Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, volume 288, issue 1952, pages 20210293

Learning how to behave: cognitive learning processes account for asymmetries in adaptation to social norms

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-06-02
scimago Q1
SJR1.692
CiteScore7.9
Impact factor3.8
ISSN09628452, 14712954
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Medicine
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
General Immunology and Microbiology
General Environmental Science
Abstract

Changes to social settings caused by migration, cultural change or pandemics force us to adapt to new social norms. Social norms provide groups of individuals with behavioural prescriptions and therefore can be inferred by observing their behaviour. This work aims to examine how cognitive learning processes affect adaptation and learning of new social norms. Using a multiplayer game, I found that participants initially complied with various social norms exhibited by the behaviour of bot-players. After gaining experience with one norm, adaptation to a new norm was observed in all cases but one, where an active-harm norm was resistant to adaptation. Using computational learning models, I found that active behaviours were learned faster than omissions, and harmful behaviours were more readily attributed to all group members than beneficial behaviours. These results provide a cognitive foundation for learning and adaptation to descriptive norms and can inform future investigations of group-level learning and cross-cultural adaptation.

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