Acute hunger does not always undermine prosociality. Jan A.
Häusser, Christina Stahlecker, Andreas Mojzisch, Johannes Leder, Paul A.
M. Van Lange & Nadira S. Faber. Nature Communications volume 10,
Article number: 4733 (2019), October 18 2019.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-12579-7
Abstract: It
has been argued that, when they are acutely hungry, people act in
self-protective ways by keeping resources to themselves rather than
sharing them. In four studies, using experimental, quasi-experimental,
and correlational designs (total N = 795), we examine the effects of
acute hunger on prosociality in a wide variety of non-interdependent
tasks (e.g. dictator game) and interdependent tasks (e.g. public goods
games). While our procedures successfully increase subjective hunger and
decrease blood glucose, we do not find significant effects of hunger on
prosociality. This is true for both decisions incentivized with money
and with food. Meta-analysis across all tasks reveals a very small
effect of hunger on prosociality in non-interdependent tasks
(d = 0.108), and a non-significant effect in interdependent tasks
(d = −0.076). In study five (N = 197), we show that, in stark contrast
to our empirical findings, people hold strong lay theories that hunger
undermines prosociality.
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