PsyArXiv Preprints | The sense of should: A biologically-based model of social pressure – Theriault, Young, Barrett (2019)

 

Source: PsyArXiv Preprints | The sense of should: A biologically-based model of social pressure

 

The sense of should: A biologically-based model of social pressure

AUTHORS
CREATED ON

January 09, 2019

LAST EDITED

September 17, 2019

Sense_of_Should_preprint.pdf

Version: 6

Abstract

What is social pressure, and how could it be adaptive to conform to others’ expectations? Existing accounts highlight the importance of reputation and social sanctions. Yet, conformist behavior is multiply determined: sometimes, a person desires social regard, but at other times she feels obligated to behave a certain way, regardless of any reputational benefit—i.e. she feels a sense of should. We develop a formal model of this sense of should, beginning from a minimal set of biological premises: that the brain is predictive, that prediction error has a metabolic cost, and that metabolic costs are prospectively avoided. It follows that unpredictable environments impose metabolic costs, and in social environments these costs can be reduced by conforming to others’ expectations. We elaborate on a sense of should’s benefits and subjective experience, its likely developmental trajectory, and its relation to embodied mental inference. From this individualistic metabolic strategy, the emergent dynamics unify social phenomenon ranging from status quo biases, to communication and motivated cognition. We offer new solutions to long-studied problems (e.g. altruistic behavior), and show how compliance with arbitrary social practices is compelled without explicit sanctions. Social pressure may provide a foundation in individuals on which societies can be built.

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Preprint DOI

10.31234/osf.io/x5rbs

License

CC-By Attribution 4.0 International