Experimental evidence suggests intergroup relations are, by default, neutral rather than aggressive.
Hirotaka ImadaNobuhiro MifunePublished in: The Behavioral and brain sciences (2024)
The target article offers a game-theoretical analysis of primitive intergroup aggression (i.e., raiding) and discusses difficulties in achieving peace. We argue the analysis does not capture the actual strategy space, missing out "do-nothing." Experimental evidence robustly shows people prefer doing nothing against out-group members over cooperating with/attacking them. Thus, the target article overestimates the likelihood of intergroup aggression.
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