Social roles, prestige, and health risk : Social niche specialization as a risk-buffering strategy
- PMID: 26190057
- DOI: 10.1007/s12110-003-1002-4
Social roles, prestige, and health risk : Social niche specialization as a risk-buffering strategy
Abstract
Selection pressure from health risk is hypothesized to have shaped adaptations motivating individuals to attempt to become valued by other individuals by generously and recurrently providing beneficial goods and/or services to them because this strategy encouraged beneficiaries to provide costly health care to their benefactors when the latter were sick or injured. Additionally, adaptations are hypothesized to have co-evolved that motivate individuals to attend to and value those who recurrently provide them with important benefits so they are willing in turn to provide costly care when a valued person is disabled or in dire need. Individuals in egalitarian foraging bands can provide a number of valuable benefits, such as defense, diplomacy, food, healing, information, technical skill, or trading savvy. We therefore expect that humans have evolved psychological mechanisms motivating the pursuit and cultivation of a difficult-to-replace social role based on the provisioning of a benefit that confers a fitness advantage on its recipients. We call this phenomenon social niche specialization. One such niche that has been well-documented is meat-sharing. Here we present cross-cultural evidence that individuals cultivate two other niches, information and tool production, that serve (among other things) to buffer health risk.
Keywords: Altruism; Banker’s paradox; Cooperation; Costly signaling; Cultural production; Health risk; Information exchange; Prestige; Social roles.
Similar articles
-
The Origins of Prestige Goods as Honest Signals of Skill and Knowledge.Hum Nat. 2008 Dec;19(4):374-88. doi: 10.1007/s12110-008-9050-4. Hum Nat. 2008. PMID: 26181748
-
Cooperation, Trust, and Antagonism: How Public Goods Are Promoted.Psychol Sci Public Interest. 2013 Dec;14(3):119-65. doi: 10.1177/1529100612474436. Psychol Sci Public Interest. 2013. PMID: 26171620
-
Natural cooperators: food sharing in humans and other primates.Evol Anthropol. 2013 Jul-Aug;22(4):186-95. doi: 10.1002/evan.21364. Evol Anthropol. 2013. PMID: 23943272
-
Evolved altruism, strong reciprocity, and perception of risk.Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2008 Apr;1128:111-20. doi: 10.1196/annals.1399.012. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2008. PMID: 18469219 Review.
-
Social Security's special minimum benefit.Soc Secur Bull. 2001-2002;64(2):1-15. Soc Secur Bull. 2001. PMID: 12428507 Review.
Cited by
-
The influence of signs of social class on compassionate responses to people in need.Front Psychol. 2022 Aug 25;13:936170. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.936170. eCollection 2022. Front Psychol. 2022. PMID: 36092048 Free PMC article.
-
Cultural evolution and prehistoric demography.Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2021 Jan 18;376(1816):20190713. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0713. Epub 2020 Nov 30. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2021. PMID: 33250027 Free PMC article. Review.
-
Two Routes to Status, One Route to Health: Trait Dominance and Prestige Differentially Associate with Self-reported Stress and Health in Two US University Populations.Adapt Human Behav Physiol. 2022;8(4):461-488. doi: 10.1007/s40750-022-00199-3. Epub 2022 Aug 23. Adapt Human Behav Physiol. 2022. PMID: 36034092 Free PMC article.
-
The cognitive costs and advantages of children's exposure to parental relationship instability: Testing an evolutionary-developmental hypothesis.Dev Psychol. 2022 Aug;58(8):1485-1499. doi: 10.1037/dev0001381. Epub 2022 Apr 25. Dev Psychol. 2022. PMID: 35467919 Free PMC article.
-
The Signaling Theory of Symptoms : An Evolutionary Explanation of the Placebo Effect.Evol Psychol. 2015 Sep 1;13(3):1474704915600559. doi: 10.1177/1474704915600559. Evol Psychol. 2015. PMID: 37924177 Free PMC article.
References
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Miscellaneous