Cognitive adaptations for n-person exchange: the evolutionary roots of organizational behavior

Organizations are composed of stable, predominantly cooperative interactions or n-person exchanges. Humans have been engaging in n-person exchanges for a great enough period of evolutionary time that we appear to have evolved a distinct constellation of species-typical mechanisms specialized to solv...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Managerial and decision economics Vol. 27; no. 2-3; pp. 103 - 129
Main Authors: Tooby, John, Cosmides, Leda, Price, Michael E.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Chichester, UK John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 01-03-2006
John Wiley and Sons
Wiley Periodicals Inc
Series:Managerial and Decision Economics
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Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Organizations are composed of stable, predominantly cooperative interactions or n-person exchanges. Humans have been engaging in n-person exchanges for a great enough period of evolutionary time that we appear to have evolved a distinct constellation of species-typical mechanisms specialized to solve the adaptive problems posed by this form of social interaction. These mechanisms appear to have been evolutionarily elaborated out of the cognitive infrastructure that initially evolved for dyadic exchange. Key adaptive problems that these mechanisms are designed to solve include coordination among individuals, and defense against exploitation by free riders. Multi-individual cooperation could not have been maintained over evolutionary time if free riders reliably benefited more than contributors to collective enterprises, and so outcompeted them. As a result, humans evolved mechanisms that implement an aversion to exploitation by free riding, and a strategy of conditional cooperation, supplemented by punitive sentiment towards free riders. Because of the design of these mechanisms, how free riding is treated is a central determinant of the survival and health of cooperative organizations. The mapping of the evolved psychology of n-party exchange cooperation may contribute to the construction of a principled theoretical foundation for the understanding of human behavior in organizations.
Bibliography:ArticleID:MDE1287
istex:059D13AA12EFED60D4156609F402E874CD7E9574
Indiana University Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis
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ISSN:0143-6570
1099-1468
DOI:10.1002/mde.1287