Authors
Michele Gelfand, Garriy Shteynberg, Tiane Lee, Janetta Lun, Sarah Lyons, Chris Bell, Joan Y Chiao, C Bayan Bruss, May Al Dabbagh, Zeynep Aycan, Abdel-Hamid Abdel-Latif, Munqith Dagher, Hilal Khashan, Nazar Soomro
Publication date
2012/3/5
Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
367
Issue
1589
Pages
692-703
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Anecdotal evidence abounds that conflicts between two individuals can spread across networks to involve a multitude of others. We advance a cultural transmission model of intergroup conflict where conflict contagion is seen as a consequence of universal human traits (ingroup preference, outgroup hostility; i.e. parochial altruism) which give their strongest expression in particular cultural contexts. Qualitative interviews conducted in the Middle East, USA and Canada suggest that parochial altruism processes vary across cultural groups and are most likely to occur in collectivistic cultural contexts that have high ingroup loyalty. Implications for future neuroscience and computational research needed to understand the emergence of intergroup conflict are discussed.
Total citations
20122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320246768436662141
Scholar articles
M Gelfand, G Shteynberg, T Lee, J Lun, S Lyons, C Bell… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2012
MJ Gelfand, G Shteynberg, C Bell, T Lee, S Lyons… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society …, 2012