Authors
Andrew M Colman, Natalie Gold
Publication date
2018/10
Source
Psychonomic bulletin & review
Volume
25
Pages
1770-1783
Publisher
Springer US
Description
In many everyday activities, individuals have a common interest in coordinating their actions. Orthodox game theory cannot explain such intuitively obvious forms of coordination as the selection of an outcome that is best for all in a common-interest game. Theories of team reasoning provide a convincing solution by proposing that people are sometimes motivated to maximize the collective payoff of a group and that they adopt a distinctive mode of reasoning from preferences to decisions. This also offers a compelling explanation of cooperation in social dilemmas. A review of team reasoning and related theories suggests how team reasoning could be incorporated into psychological theories of group identification and social value orientation theory to provide a deeper understanding of these phenomena.
Total citations
20182019202020212022202320243326127127
Scholar articles