The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Francesco Guala, University of Milan
Date: Wed, March 28, 2012 - 17:00 - 18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34.,
Room G15
Is Group Identity Efficient?
An Empirical Test of Team Preference and Collective Intentionality
Theories
Abstract:
Theories of collective intentionality have roots in three different
disciplines: group identity theory in psychology, team preference
theories in economics, and collective intentionality theories in
philosophy. Although philosophers have often endorsed a naturalistic
approach to collective intentions, they have mostly focused on purely
conceptual issues such as the reducibility of collective to individual
intentionality or the existence of logically distinct forms of
collective intention. Psychologists and game theorists, in contrast,
have provided most of the empirical data that is currently available on
this topic. These data, however, come from experiments that were not
especially devised to test collective intentionality theory, and hence
do not speak convincingly either for or against the theory. In
particular, they fail to distinguish between genuine collective
intentions (or team preferences) and norm-based explanations of group
behaviour.
Following Bratman's and Bacharach's analyses, I argue that
a decisive test of collective intentionality or team preference theory
must focus on a special class of perturbations of individual payoffs,
which allow one to check whether experimental subjects are pursuing
collective or individual goals. The payoff structure however must be
designed in such a way as to control for other-regarding preferences (or
social norms) such as altruism and inequality-aversion. Finally, I
present new data from a large set of mini-dictator games showing that
group identity (1) does not improve significantly the joint payoffs of
group members, but in several cases actually reduces efficiency; (2)
does not systematically enhance altruism; (3) has a levelling effect,
making subjects particularly averse to disadvantageous inequality; and
(4) tends to moderate selfish preferences. The data overall suggest that
theories of social norms provide a better explanation of group behaviour
than collective intentionality or team preference models.We're looking
forward to see you there (Frankel Leo u. 30-34) !
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