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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(48): e2301642120, 2023 Nov 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37983511

RESUMEN

Science is among humanity's greatest achievements, yet scientific censorship is rarely studied empirically. We explore the social, psychological, and institutional causes and consequences of scientific censorship (defined as actions aimed at obstructing particular scientific ideas from reaching an audience for reasons other than low scientific quality). Popular narratives suggest that scientific censorship is driven by authoritarian officials with dark motives, such as dogmatism and intolerance. Our analysis suggests that scientific censorship is often driven by scientists, who are primarily motivated by self-protection, benevolence toward peer scholars, and prosocial concerns for the well-being of human social groups. This perspective helps explain both recent findings on scientific censorship and recent changes to scientific institutions, such as the use of harm-based criteria to evaluate research. We discuss unknowns surrounding the consequences of censorship and provide recommendations for improving transparency and accountability in scientific decision-making to enable the exploration of these unknowns. The benefits of censorship may sometimes outweigh costs. However, until costs and benefits are examined empirically, scholars on opposing sides of ongoing debates are left to quarrel based on competing values, assumptions, and intuitions.


Asunto(s)
Censura de la Investigación , Ciencia , Responsabilidad Social , Costos y Análisis de Costo
2.
Behav Brain Sci ; 44: e109, 2021 09 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34588049

RESUMEN

This article is extraordinarily rigorous and rich, although there are reasons to be skeptical of its theory that music originated to signal group quality and infant solicitude. These include the lack of any signature of the centrality of these functions in the distribution or experience of music; of a role for the pleasure taken in music; and of its connections with language.


Asunto(s)
Música , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas , Humanos , Lactante
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(45): 27767-27776, 2020 11 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33093198

RESUMEN

Humans and viruses have been coevolving for millennia. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19) has been particularly successful in evading our evolved defenses. The outcome has been tragic-across the globe, millions have been sickened and hundreds of thousands have died. Moreover, the quarantine has radically changed the structure of our lives, with devastating social and economic consequences that are likely to unfold for years. An evolutionary perspective can help us understand the progression and consequences of the pandemic. Here, a diverse group of scientists, with expertise from evolutionary medicine to cultural evolution, provide insights about the pandemic and its aftermath. At the most granular level, we consider how viruses might affect social behavior, and how quarantine, ironically, could make us susceptible to other maladies, due to a lack of microbial exposure. At the psychological level, we describe the ways in which the pandemic can affect mating behavior, cooperation (or the lack thereof), and gender norms, and how we can use disgust to better activate native "behavioral immunity" to combat disease spread. At the cultural level, we describe shifting cultural norms and how we might harness them to better combat disease and the negative social consequences of the pandemic. These insights can be used to craft solutions to problems produced by the pandemic and to lay the groundwork for a scientific agenda to capture and understand what has become, in effect, a worldwide social experiment.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Biológica , COVID-19/psicología , Características Humanas , Pandemias/ética , Conducta Social , COVID-19/epidemiología , COVID-19/prevención & control , Demografía/tendencias , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Pandemias/estadística & datos numéricos , Distanciamiento Físico
4.
Science ; 366(6468)2019 11 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31753969

RESUMEN

What is universal about music, and what varies? We built a corpus of ethnographic text on musical behavior from a representative sample of the world's societies, as well as a discography of audio recordings. The ethnographic corpus reveals that music (including songs with words) appears in every society observed; that music varies along three dimensions (formality, arousal, religiosity), more within societies than across them; and that music is associated with certain behavioral contexts such as infant care, healing, dance, and love. The discography-analyzed through machine summaries, amateur and expert listener ratings, and manual transcriptions-reveals that acoustic features of songs predict their primary behavioral context; that tonality is widespread, perhaps universal; that music varies in rhythmic and melodic complexity; and that elements of melodies and rhythms found worldwide follow power laws.


Asunto(s)
Antropología Cultural , Música , Canto , Percepción Auditiva , Conducta , Comparación Transcultural , Baile , Humanos , Cuidado del Lactante , Recién Nacido , Amor , Psicoacústica , Religión
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(28): 13751-13758, 2019 07 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31253709

RESUMEN

People often coordinate for mutual gain, such as keeping to opposite sides of a stairway, dubbing an object or place with a name, or assembling en masse to protest a regime. Because successful coordination requires complementary choices, these opportunities raise the puzzle of how people attain the common knowledge that facilitates coordination, in which a person knows X, knows that the other knows X, knows that the other knows that he knows, ad infinitum. We show that people are highly sensitive to the distinction between common knowledge and mere private or shared knowledge, and that they deploy this distinction strategically in diverse social situations that have the structure of coordination games, including market cooperation, innuendo, bystander intervention, attributions of charitability, self-conscious emotions, and moral condemnation.


Asunto(s)
Efecto Espectador/fisiología , Emociones/fisiología , Percepción Social , Teoría de la Mente , Conducta Cooperativa , Femenino , Humanos , Relaciones Interpersonales , Conocimiento , Masculino , Mentalización
6.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 148(1): 158-173, 2019 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30335447

RESUMEN

Why do people esteem anonymous charitable giving? We connect normative theories of charitability (captured in Maimonides' Ladder of Charity) with evolutionary theories of partner choice to test predictions on how attributions of charitability are affected by states of knowledge: whether the identity of the donor or of the beneficiary is revealed to the other. Consistent with the theories, in Experiments 1-2 participants judged a double-blind gift as more charitable than one to a revealed beneficiary, which in turn was judged as more charitable than one from a revealed donor. We also found one exception: Participants judged a donor who revealed only himself as slightly less, rather than more, charitable than one who revealed both identities. Experiment 3 explains the exception as a reaction to the donor's perceived sense of superiority and disinterest in a social relationship. Experiment 4 found that donors were judged as more charitable when the gift was shared knowledge (each aware of the other's identity, but unsure of the other's awareness) than when it was common knowledge (awareness of awareness). Experiment 5, which titrated anonymity against donation size, found that not even a hundredfold larger gift could compensate for the disapproval elicited by a donor revealing his identity. Experiment 6 showed that participants' judgments of charitability flip depending on whose perspective they take: Observers disapprove of donations that they would prefer as beneficiaries. Together, these experiments provide insight into why people care about how a donor gives, not just how much. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).


Asunto(s)
Altruismo , Organizaciones de Beneficencia , Conducta de Elección , Percepción Social , Adulto , Humanos
7.
Cognition ; 177: 263-277, 2018 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29729947

RESUMEN

Children learn language more easily than adults, though when and why this ability declines have been obscure for both empirical reasons (underpowered studies) and conceptual reasons (measuring the ultimate attainment of learners who started at different ages cannot by itself reveal changes in underlying learning ability). We address both limitations with a dataset of unprecedented size (669,498 native and non-native English speakers) and a computational model that estimates the trajectory of underlying learning ability by disentangling current age, age at first exposure, and years of experience. This allows us to provide the first direct estimate of how grammar-learning ability changes with age, finding that it is preserved almost to the crux of adulthood (17.4 years old) and then declines steadily. This finding held not only for "difficult" syntactic phenomena but also for "easy" syntactic phenomena that are normally mastered early in acquisition. The results support the existence of a sharply-defined critical period for language acquisition, but the age of offset is much later than previously speculated. The size of the dataset also provides novel insight into several other outstanding questions in language acquisition.


Asunto(s)
Período Crítico Psicológico , Desarrollo del Lenguaje , Aprendizaje , Multilingüismo , Adolescente , Adulto , Factores de Edad , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Niño , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Modelos Psicológicos , Factores de Tiempo , Adulto Joven
8.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 43(8): 1173-1182, 2017 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28150958

RESUMEN

What is the relationship between the language people use to describe an event and their moral judgments? We test the hypothesis that moral judgment and causative verbs rely on the same underlying mental model of people's actions. Experiment 1a finds that participants choose different verbs to describe the major variants of a moral dilemma, the trolley problem, mirroring differences in their wrongness judgments: they described direct harm with a single causative verb (Adam killed the man), and indirect harm with an intransitive verb in a periphrastic construction (Adam caused the man to die). Experiments 1b and 2 separate physical causality from moral valuation by varying whether the victim is a person or animal and whether the harmful action rescues people or inanimate objects. The results show that people's moral judgments lead them to portray a causal event as either more or less direct and intended, which in turn shapes their verb choices. Experiment 3 finds the same basic asymmetry in verb usage in a production task in which participants freely described what happened. (PsycINFO Database Record


Asunto(s)
Juicio , Principios Morales , Psicolingüística , Adulto , Conducta de Elección , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Pruebas Psicológicas
9.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 145(5): 621-629, 2016 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26913616

RESUMEN

The more potential helpers there are, the less likely any individual is to help. A traditional explanation for this bystander effect is that responsibility diffuses across the multiple bystanders, diluting the responsibility of each. We investigate an alternative, which combines the volunteer's dilemma (each bystander is best off if another responds) with recursive theory of mind (each infers what the others know about what he knows) to predict that actors will strategically shirk when they think others feel compelled to help. In 3 experiments, participants responded to a (fictional) person who needed help from at least 1 volunteer. Participants were in groups of 2 or 5 and had varying information about whether other group members knew that help was needed. As predicted, people's decision to help zigzagged with the depth of their asymmetric, recursive knowledge (e.g., "John knows that Michael knows that John knows help is needed"), and replicated the classic bystander effect when they had common knowledge (everyone knowing what everyone knows). The results demonstrate that the bystander effect may result not from a mere diffusion of responsibility but specifically from actors' strategic computations.


Asunto(s)
Efecto Espectador/fisiología , Conducta Social , Teoría de la Mente/fisiología , Adulto , Emociones , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino
11.
Behav Brain Sci ; 38: e154, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26786231

RESUMEN

Political bias has indeed been a distorter of psychology, not just in particular research areas but in an aversion to the explanatory depth available from politically fraught fields like evolution. I add two friendly amendments to the target article: (1) The leftist moral narrative may be based on zero-sum competition among identity groups rather than continuous progress; and (2) ideological bias should be dealt with not just via diversity of ideological factions but by minimizing the influence of ideology altogether.


Asunto(s)
Narración , Política , Sesgo
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(52): E5616-22, 2014 Dec 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25512502

RESUMEN

Languages vary enormously in global importance because of historical, demographic, political, and technological forces. However, beyond simple measures of population and economic power, there has been no rigorous quantitative way to define the global influence of languages. Here we use the structure of the networks connecting multilingual speakers and translated texts, as expressed in book translations, multiple language editions of Wikipedia, and Twitter, to provide a concept of language importance that goes beyond simple economic or demographic measures. We find that the structure of these three global language networks (GLNs) is centered on English as a global hub and around a handful of intermediate hub languages, which include Spanish, German, French, Russian, Portuguese, and Chinese. We validate the measure of a language's centrality in the three GLNs by showing that it exhibits a strong correlation with two independent measures of the number of famous people born in the countries associated with that language. These results suggest that the position of a language in the GLN contributes to the visibility of its speakers and the global popularity of the cultural content they produce.


Asunto(s)
Bases de Datos Factuales , Internet , Modelos Teóricos , Traducción , Humanos
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(38): 13790-4, 2014 Sep 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25201988

RESUMEN

We identify common genetic variants associated with cognitive performance using a two-stage approach, which we call the proxy-phenotype method. First, we conduct a genome-wide association study of educational attainment in a large sample (n = 106,736), which produces a set of 69 education-associated SNPs. Second, using independent samples (n = 24,189), we measure the association of these education-associated SNPs with cognitive performance. Three SNPs (rs1487441, rs7923609, and rs2721173) are significantly associated with cognitive performance after correction for multiple hypothesis testing. In an independent sample of older Americans (n = 8,652), we also show that a polygenic score derived from the education-associated SNPs is associated with memory and absence of dementia. Convergent evidence from a set of bioinformatics analyses implicates four specific genes (KNCMA1, NRXN1, POU2F3, and SCRT). All of these genes are associated with a particular neurotransmitter pathway involved in synaptic plasticity, the main cellular mechanism for learning and memory.


Asunto(s)
Cognición/fisiología , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Herencia Multifactorial/fisiología , Plasticidad Neuronal/genética , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Transmisión Sináptica/genética , Proteínas de Unión al Calcio , Moléculas de Adhesión Celular Neuronal/genética , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Memoria/fisiología , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/genética , Moléculas de Adhesión de Célula Nerviosa , Factores de Transcripción de Octámeros/genética
14.
Trends Cogn Sci ; 18(11): 586-95, 2014 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25172525

RESUMEN

Specific language impairment (SLI), a genetic developmental disorder, offers insights into the neurobiological and computational organization of language. A subtype, Grammatical-SLI (G-SLI), involves greater impairments in 'extended' grammatical representations, which are nonlocal, hierarchical, abstract, and composed, than in 'basic' ones, which are local, linear, semantic, and holistic. This distinction is seen in syntax, morphology, and phonology, and may be tied to abnormalities in the left hemisphere and basal ganglia, consistent with new models of the neurobiology of language which distinguish dorsal and ventral processing streams. Delineating neurolinguistic phenotypes promises a better understanding of the effects of genes on the brain circuitry underlying normal and impaired language abilities.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos del Desarrollo del Lenguaje/fisiopatología , Lenguaje , Niño , Desarrollo Infantil/fisiología , Lenguaje Infantil , Humanos , Fonética , Psicolingüística
15.
J Pers Soc Psychol ; 107(4): 657-76, 2014 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25111301

RESUMEN

Research on human cooperation has concentrated on the puzzle of altruism, in which 1 actor incurs a cost to benefit another, and the psychology of reciprocity, which evolved to solve this problem. We examine the complementary puzzle of mutualism, in which actors can benefit each other simultaneously, and the psychology of coordination, which ensures such benefits. Coordination is facilitated by common knowledge: the recursive belief state in which A knows X, B knows X, A knows that B knows X, B knows that A knows X, ad infinitum. We test whether people are sensitive to common knowledge when deciding whether to engage in risky coordination. Participants decided between working alone for a certain profit and working together for a potentially higher profit that they would receive only if their partner made the same choice. Results showed that more participants attempted risky coordination when they and their prospective partner had common knowledge of the payoffs (broadcast over a loudspeaker) than when they had only shared knowledge (conveyed to both by a messenger) or private knowledge (revealed to each partner separately). These results support the hypothesis that people represent common knowledge as a distinct cognitive category that licenses them to coordinate with others for mutual gain. We discuss how this hypothesis can provide a unified explanation for diverse phenomena in human social life, including recursive mentalizing, performative speech acts, public protests, hypocrisy, and self-conscious emotional expressions.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Cooperativa , Relaciones Interpersonales , Recompensa , Teoría de la Mente/fisiología , Adulto , Altruismo , Femenino , Humanos , Conocimiento , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Asunción de Riesgos
16.
Psychol Sci ; 25(8): 1511-7, 2014 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24898726

RESUMEN

What function do facial expressions have? We tested the hypothesis that some expressions serve as honest signals of subjective commitments-in particular, that angry faces increase the effectiveness of threats. In an ultimatum game, proposers decided how much money to offer a responder while seeing a film clip depicting an angry or a neutral facial expression, together with a written threat that was either inherently credible (a 50-50 split) or less credible (a demand for 70% of the money). Proposers offered greater amounts in response to the less credible threat when it was accompanied by an angry expression than when it was accompanied by a neutral expression, but were unaffected by the expression when dealing with the credible threat. This finding supports the hypothesis that angry expressions are honest signals that enhance the credibility of threats.


Asunto(s)
Ira/fisiología , Expresión Facial , Adulto , Análisis de Varianza , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Estimulación Luminosa/métodos
17.
Am Psychol ; 68(6): 467-8, 2013 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24016117

RESUMEN

Presents an obituary for George A. Miller (1920-2012). Miller ranks among the most important psychologists of the 20th century. In addition to writing one of the best known papers in the history of psychology ("The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information," published in Psychological Review in 1956), Miller also fomented the cognitive revolution, invented psycholinguistics and cognitive psychology, imported powerful ideas from the theories of information, communication, grammar, semantics, and artificial intelligence, and left us a sparkling oeuvre that proves that a rigorous scientist needn't write in soggy prose. Honors rained down on Miller. APA gave him the Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions (1963), the American Psychological Foundation Gold Medal Award for Life Achievement in Psychological Science (1990), the William James Book Award (1992, for The Science of Words), and the Award for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology (2003), and named a prize after him, as did the Cognitive Neuroscience Society. Miller was also honored by the Association for Psychological Science and the American Speech and Hearing Association. In 2000, he won the John P. McGovern Award in the Behavioral Sciences from the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and in 1991, the National Medal of Science, the country's highest scientific honor.


Asunto(s)
Psicolingüística/historia , Psicología/historia , Ciencia Cognitiva/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI
18.
Am J Public Health ; 103 Suppl 1: S152-66, 2013 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23927501

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: We explain why traits of interest to behavioral scientists may have a genetic architecture featuring hundreds or thousands of loci with tiny individual effects rather than a few with large effects and why such an architecture makes it difficult to find robust associations between traits and genes. METHODS: We conducted a genome-wide association study at 2 sites, Harvard University and Union College, measuring more than 100 physical and behavioral traits with a sample size typical of candidate gene studies. We evaluated predictions that alleles with large effect sizes would be rare and most traits of interest to social science are likely characterized by a lack of strong directional selection. We also carried out a theoretical analysis of the genetic architecture of traits based on R.A. Fisher's geometric model of natural selection and empirical analyses of the effects of selection bias and phenotype measurement stability on the results of genetic association studies. RESULTS: Although we replicated several known genetic associations with physical traits, we found only 2 associations with behavioral traits that met the nominal genome-wide significance threshold, indicating that physical and behavioral traits are mainly affected by numerous genes with small effects. CONCLUSIONS: The challenge for social science genomics is the likelihood that genes are connected to behavioral variation by lengthy, nonlinear, interactive causal chains, and unraveling these chains requires allying with personal genomics to take advantage of the potential for large sample sizes as well as continuing with traditional epidemiological studies.


Asunto(s)
Color del Ojo/genética , Genes , Color del Cabello/genética , Personalidad/genética , Ciencias Sociales , Adolescente , Adulto , Conducta , Fenómenos Biológicos , Femenino , Investigación Genética , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Humanos , Masculino , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple/genética , Selección Genética , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Adulto Joven
19.
Science ; 338(6105): 327-8, 2012 Oct 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23087229
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