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Costly third-party punishment (TPP) is an effective way to enforce fairness norms and promote cooperation. Recent studies have shown that the third party considers not only the proposer's suggested allocation but also the receiver's response to the allocation, which was typically ignored in traditional TPP studies when making punishment decisions. However, it remains unclear whether and how the varying unfair allocations and receivers' responses are integrated into third-party punishment. The current study addressed these issues at behavioral and electrophysiological levels by employing a modified third-party punishment task involving proposers' highly or moderately unfair allocations and the receivers' acceptance or rejection responses. At the behavioral level, participants punished proposers more often when receivers rejected relative to accepted unfair allocations. This effect was further modulated by the unfairness degree of allocations, indicated by a more pronounced rejection-sensitive effect when participants observed the moderately unfair offers. Electrophysiologically, when the receiver rejected the moderately unfair allocations, a stronger late-stage component P300/LPP, which was considered to be involved in allocations of attention resources, was found. Meanwhile, separated from the P300/LPP, the P200 associated with early attention capture demonstrated a rejection-sensitive effect. Together, in the costly TPP studies, the receiver is typically designated as passive and silent, and her/his responses to unfairness are conventionally ignored. However, our results indicate that except for the proposer's distribution behavior, the receiver's response does have an impact on third-party punishment in a way that interacts with the unfairness of allocations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainresbull.2024.111082 | DOI Listing |
Child Dev
August 2025
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA.
Following a transgression, forgiveness can restore power imbalances and repair damaged bonds, helping maintain important relationships. Yet, we know little about which kinds of responses to transgression best foster forgiveness. Across two studies, with 5- to 9-year-olds in the United States (N = 302; 159 female, 64.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2025
Rady School of Management, University of California, San Diego, CA 92093.
Third-party punishment is theorized by some scholars to be essential to the evolution of large-scale cooperation, but empirically, it often fails to bring about its desired effects. Here, we suggest that third-party punishment destabilizes cooperation when third parties have profit motives to punish. Across nine economic games and judgment experiments (including four preregistered studies), we find that when third-party punishment is profitable, rates of cooperation decrease immediately and remain lower even when punishment outcomes are optimized to support cooperative behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Child Psychol
December 2025
Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Zhejiang University, PR China. Electronic address:
Third-party punishment (TTP) promotes social cooperation and enforces social norms. Even children are willing to pay a cost to implement such punishment. While children punish for retributive and consequentialist concern focused on the violator, whether they consider victims' feelings when implement TPP remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPers Soc Psychol Bull
July 2025
James Cook University, Singapore.
This study investigated how social class is related to children's third-party intervention (TPI) tendency and forms (compensation vs. punishment). Children from different social class backgrounds watched short animated films depicting two cartoon characters making fair or unfair decisions in resource distribution scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Psychol
July 2025
Department of Neuroscience and Psychology, Boston College.
Maintaining cooperation requires responding to wrongdoing by, for example, punishing transgressors. However, we do not respond to all transgressions similarly: as adults, we are more likely to pursue the punishment of certain transgressions compared to others. This study ( = 213) looked at how presenting different transgressions may shape the developmental trajectory of third-party punishment behavior in children.
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