Descrizione del progetto
Cosa ci fa decidere a chi chiedere aiuto?
Cosa ci passa per la testa quando chiediamo aiuto? Come decidiamo a chi rivolgerci? Mentre gli scienziati hanno spesso cercato informazioni su chi presta aiuto, sono state pochissime le ricerche sulla persona aiutata. Il progetto HelpSeeking, finanziato dall’UE, si concentrerà su questo aspetto poco studiato ed esplorerà lo sviluppo e l’evoluzione della ricerca strategica di aiuto da parte dell’uomo con bambini umani e scimpanzé. Esso approfondirà se la decisione del cercatore di aiuto sia influenzata da un eventuale sforzo fisico o sacrificio materiale che chi presta aiuto dovrà fare, o da una relazione di amicizia o di dominio tra l’aiutante e il cercatore di aiuto. Il progetto sarà il primo a fornire informazioni sulle radici evolutive e di sviluppo della ricerca strategica di aiuto.
Obiettivo
Human altruistic helping has deep evolutionary and developmental roots: Both human children and our closest non-human relatives - chimpanzees - often pay a cost to benefit another individual. Previous research on helping has nearly exclusively focused on the helper, i.e. the individual providing the help. However, helping also involves someone who is being helped. A helpee is not just a passive recipient of help, but someone who can actively and flexibly increase the chances of being helped, for example by being strategic in whom to ask for help. When determining who is willing to help, two questions are of particular relevance: (a) How costly is it for the potential helper to help? (b) What is my relationship with the potential helper? Considering the costs of and one’s relationship to potential helpers is crucial when soliciting help. Although it can significantly improve an individual's fitness, it has never been studied systematically when it evolved in our evolution and how it develops over ontogeny. Thus, unraveling the phylogenetic and ontogenetic roots of human’s strategic help-seeking is the objective of the proposed project. Therefore, I would like to conduct two interdisciplinary projects with human children and chimpanzees. In Project 1, I will investigate whether considering the costs of potential helpers for providing help influences the decision whom to ask for help, with costs operationalised either as physical effort (Study 1) or material sacrifice (Study 2). In Project 2, I will study the effects of social relations to the potential helpers on the help-seeking desision, considering in particular friendship (Study 3) and dominance (Study 4). Using an innovative approach – combining observations of naturally occurring behaviors and carefully controlled experiments – this project will be the first to provide insight into the evolutionary and developmental roots of strategic help-seeking.
Parole chiave
Programma(i)
Argomento(i)
Invito a presentare proposte
(si apre in una nuova finestra) H2020-MSCA-IF-2018
Vedi altri progetti per questo bandoMeccanismo di finanziamento
MSCA-IF -Coordinatore
37077 GOTTINGEN
Germania