Authors
Carsten KW De Dreu, Jörg Gross, Zsombor Méder, Michael Giffin, Eliska Prochazkova, Jonathan Krikeb, Simon Columbus
Publication date
2016/9/20
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
113
Issue
38
Pages
10524-10529
Publisher
National Acad Sciences
Description
Intergroup conflict persists when and because individuals make costly contributions to their group’s fighting capacity, but how groups organize contributions into effective collective action remains poorly understood. Here we distinguish between contributions aimed at subordinating out-groups (out-group aggression) from those aimed at defending the in-group against possible out-group aggression (in-group defense). We conducted two experiments in which three-person aggressor groups confronted three-person defender groups in a multiround contest game (n = 276; 92 aggressor–defender contests). Individuals received an endowment from which they could contribute to their group’s fighting capacity. Contributions were always wasted, but when the aggressor group’s fighting capacity exceeded that of the defender group, the aggressor group acquired the defender group’s remaining resources (otherwise …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CKW De Dreu, J Gross, Z Méder, M Giffin… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016