The boundaries of cooperation: sharing and ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique
Permalink :
Title :
The boundaries of cooperation: sharing and coupling from ethology to neuroscience.
Author(s) :
Vanutelli, Maria Elide [Auteur]
Università cattolica del Sacro Cuore [Piacenza e Cremona] [Unicatt]
Nandrino, Jean-Louis [Auteur]
Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives (SCALab) - UMR 9193
Laboratoire Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives - UMR 9193 [SCALab]
Balconi, Michela [Auteur]
Università cattolica del Sacro Cuore [Piacenza e Cremona] [Unicatt]
Università cattolica del Sacro Cuore [Piacenza e Cremona] [Unicatt]
Nandrino, Jean-Louis [Auteur]

Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives (SCALab) - UMR 9193
Laboratoire Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives - UMR 9193 [SCALab]
Balconi, Michela [Auteur]
Università cattolica del Sacro Cuore [Piacenza e Cremona] [Unicatt]
Journal title :
Neuropsychological Trends
Volume number :
19
Pages :
83-104
Publication date :
2016-04
ISSN :
1970-3201
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences cognitives
English abstract : [en]
Cooperation is usually described as a human tendency to act jointly that involves helping, sharing, and acting prosocially. Nonetheless clues of cooperative actions can be found also in non-humans animals, as described in ...
Show more >Cooperation is usually described as a human tendency to act jointly that involves helping, sharing, and acting prosocially. Nonetheless clues of cooperative actions can be found also in non-humans animals, as described in the first section of the present work. Even if such behaviors have been conventionally attributed to the research of immediate benefits within the animal world, some recent experimental evidence highlighted that, in highly social species, the effects of cooperative actions on others’ wellbeing may constitute a reward per se, thus suggesting that a strictly economic perspective cant exhaust the meaning of cooperative decisions in animals. Here we propose, in the second section, that a deeper explanation concerning cognitive and emotional abilities in both humans and animals should be taken into account. Finally, the last part of the paper will be devoted to the description of synchronization patterns in humans within complex neuroscientific experimental paradigms, such as hyperscanning.Show less >
Show more >Cooperation is usually described as a human tendency to act jointly that involves helping, sharing, and acting prosocially. Nonetheless clues of cooperative actions can be found also in non-humans animals, as described in the first section of the present work. Even if such behaviors have been conventionally attributed to the research of immediate benefits within the animal world, some recent experimental evidence highlighted that, in highly social species, the effects of cooperative actions on others’ wellbeing may constitute a reward per se, thus suggesting that a strictly economic perspective cant exhaust the meaning of cooperative decisions in animals. Here we propose, in the second section, that a deeper explanation concerning cognitive and emotional abilities in both humans and animals should be taken into account. Finally, the last part of the paper will be devoted to the description of synchronization patterns in humans within complex neuroscientific experimental paradigms, such as hyperscanning.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Non spécifiée
Administrative institution(s) :
Université de Lille
CNRS
CHU Lille
CNRS
CHU Lille
Research team(s) :
Équipe Dynamique Émotionnelle et Pathologies (DEEP)
Submission date :
2019-02-13T14:48:26Z
2019-11-26T16:20:19Z
2021-03-08T09:59:35Z
2019-11-26T16:20:19Z
2021-03-08T09:59:35Z
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- Vanutelli et al 2016 NeuropsychologicalTrends.pdf
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