A reward self-bias leads to more optimal foraging for ourselves than others

Luis Sebastian Contreras-Huerta, Andrea Pisauro, Svenja Küchenhoff, Arno Gekiere, Campbell Le Heron, Patricia Lockwood, Matthew AJ Apps

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

People are self-biased for rewards. We place a higher value on rewards if we receive them than if other people do. However, existing work has ignored one of the most powerful theories from behavioural ecology of how animals seek rewards in everyday life, Marginal Value Theorem (MVT), which accounts for optimal behaviour for maximising rewards. Does this self-bias help or hinder humans to maximise reward when foraging? Participants had to decide when to leave patches where reward intake was gradually depleting, in environments with different average reward rates. Half of the time participants foraged for themselves, and in the other half they collected rewards for an anonymous stranger. The optimal MVT derived solution states people should leave when the instantaneous reward intake in a patch equals the average rate in an environment. Across two studies, people were more optimal when foraging for self, showing a reduced sensitivity to instantaneous rewards when foraging for other. Autistic traits modulated sensitivity to reward rates when foraging for self but not for other. These results highlight that the self-bias may be adaptive, helping people maximise reward intake.
Original languageEnglish
JournalScientific Reports
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 5 Aug 2024

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