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1 ted in specific domains (e.g., language, SDQ prosocial).
2 ations for solar adoption: self-interest and prosocial.
3 amic networks only promote cooperation among prosocials.
4   But how does the brain learn what acts are prosocial?
5 social deficits were seen in the emission of prosocial 50-kHz ultrasonic vocalizations (USV) parallel
6 asticity and cognition, but led to increased prosocial 50-kHz USV emission rates and enhanced social
7 onduct problems, peer conflicts, and reduced prosocial abilities.
8                                          The prosocial account argues that oxytocin mainly enhances a
9                                              Prosocial actions were manifested in all three species f
10  questions about how social emotions produce prosocial actions.
11 ild on this study by introducing intentional prosocial activities into classrooms and recommending th
12                                              Prosocial acts benefitting others are widespread amongst
13                                         When prosocial acts did not require personal sacrifice, proso
14 atic memories within the context of positive/prosocial affects can facilitate diverse psychotherapies
15 rest to scholars of the effects of stress on prosocial and aggressive behavior, but call for refineme
16 es children's sleep, school performance, and prosocial and aggressive behaviors and that these effect
17 hile children watched characters engaging in prosocial and antisocial actions in two different tasks.
18 manization, emphasizing its implications for prosocial and antisocial behavior and for moral judgment
19                       A new study shows that prosocial and antisocial behaviors arise from individual
20                        The continuum between prosocial and antisocial extremes reflects variation in
21  gods are mentioned, and I discuss the words prosocial and antisocial.
22 cial to mental health due to its anxiolytic, prosocial and antistress effects, but evidence for anxio
23    Oxytocin has received much attention as a prosocial and anxiolytic neuropeptide.
24 s that the ability to learn what actions are prosocial and choosing to perform helpful acts may be di
25 ctionable suggestions for cultivating a more prosocial and diverse culture of science.
26 merging biases might help explain the robust prosocial and financial biases men exhibit toward attrac
27 and maternal-perinatal association, modulate prosocial and inbreeding-avoidance behaviors toward spec
28 che also coincides with the emergence of the prosocial and neurobehavioral skills of middle childhood
29  in the neuroeconomics literature: fairness, prosocial and punishing behaviours.
30 stress factor of the brain, besides its many prosocial and reproductive effects.
31 is no difference in reports of anger between prosocial and selfish individuals after finding out that
32 lassify participants a priori as egoistic or prosocial and then embedded them in homogeneous networks
33  use more energy from the communal resource, prosocials are less likely to act on their anger and ret
34  may reap more benefits from emphasizing the prosocial aspects of vaccination in sparser environments
35 els of contemporary social capital and other prosocial attitudes.
36                                        Human prosocial behavior (PB) emerges in childhood and matures
37 uidance to policy makers aiming to encourage prosocial behavior across all income groups.
38         What explains variation in levels of prosocial behavior across communities?
39 volution of cooperation that is relevant for prosocial behavior among humans.
40  its capacity for widespread cooperation and prosocial behavior among large and genetically heterogen
41  incentivized online experiment (n = 763) on prosocial behavior and a large field experiment (n = 17,
42 uromodulatory hormone oxytocin (OT) promotes prosocial behavior and can improve social function.
43 e.g., common group identity) can account for prosocial behavior and cooperative norms without the nee
44 suggest how interventions aimed at improving prosocial behavior and emotion regulation abilities hold
45 n motives form a powerful force in promoting prosocial behavior and enabling large-scale cooperation
46 ship between neurochemical systems and human prosocial behavior and have potential implications for o
47  the Israeli OPV campaign is attributable to prosocial behavior and heterogeneous perceived risk of p
48                              The examples of prosocial behavior and information exchange in decision-
49 ognitive perspective taking as precursors of prosocial behavior and suggest that these discrete route
50 h specific interventions designed to promote prosocial behavior and well-being.
51 dgments encourages cooperation in groups and prosocial behavior between group members.
52 olution to cooperation problems and promotes prosocial behavior between group members.
53 creating the conditions for the extension of prosocial behavior beyond close-knit circles to include
54     The current study uses big data to study prosocial behavior by analyzing donations made on the Go
55                  We examined the ontogeny of prosocial behavior by studying 326 children 3-14 y of ag
56 testosterone men may often engage in greater prosocial behavior compared to higher testosterone men.
57 ncreased attentiveness to others and greater prosocial behavior compared to individuals of higher SES
58 ts to others was personally costly, rates of prosocial behavior dropped across all six societies as c
59 e-theoretical model, we examine and quantify prosocial behavior during the OPV campaign.
60  in multiethnic societies depends on whether prosocial behavior extends beyond close-knit networks an
61 e that experience of conspecific companions' prosocial behavior facilitates prosocial behavior in chi
62   While a substantial body of scholarship on prosocial behavior has provided evidence of such norms,
63                             However, similar prosocial behavior has since been documented in other pr
64 ted whether direct reciprocity could promote prosocial behavior in brown capuchin monkeys (Cebus apel
65 c companions' prosocial behavior facilitates prosocial behavior in children and chimpanzees.
66 d directly link these neural computations to prosocial behavior in children.
67 peptide oxytocin (OT) is thought to regulate prosocial behavior in mammals, there is considerable deb
68 d this amygdala representation and increased prosocial behavior in more individualistic participants
69 nary explanations also account for increased prosocial behavior in situations in which attractive ind
70 ce increase the likelihood of both risky and prosocial behavior in the presence of peers.
71 amework could provide insights into atypical prosocial behavior in those with disorders of social cog
72                      We argue that increased prosocial behavior is a contextually adaptive response f
73  frameworks model the conditions under which prosocial behavior is evolutionarily viable, yet no unif
74       Taken together, our findings show that prosocial behavior is not an invariant social trait; rat
75  behaviors, but the link between empathy and prosocial behavior is still unclear.
76  later, the sign of the effect reversed, and prosocial behavior led to significantly lower happiness
77 t observations have suggested that, instead, prosocial behavior may reflect an intrinsic value placed
78  It is unclear, however, whether OT promotes prosocial behavior per se, or whether it facilitates soc
79                                         Does prosocial behavior promote happiness?
80  source of human altruism by suggesting that prosocial behavior results, in part, from our broader te
81 large inter- and intra-personal variation in prosocial behavior still needs to be explained.
82  These results demonstrate that OXT promotes prosocial behavior through direct effects on VTA DA neur
83  inbreeding and the mechanisms that regulate prosocial behavior toward kin.
84 ce the effects of xenophobia by facilitating prosocial behavior toward refugees.
85 , population density) with psychology (e.g., prosocial behavior), (b) process studies that clarify wh
86 x, average weekly sleep, school performance, prosocial behavior, and aggressive behavior.
87 erienced low status showed more communal and prosocial behavior, and endorsed more egalitarian life g
88 review work exploring responses to inequity, prosocial behavior, and other relevant behaviors in nonh
89 ate that group attachment positively affects prosocial behavior, and that this effect is not simply t
90 sion of public goods, collective action, and prosocial behavior, and we give special attention to fie
91 rovements to children's interpersonal (e.g., prosocial behavior, authority acceptance), intrapersonal
92 evidence that all three species will display prosocial behavior, but only in certain conditions.
93 ligion contours people's moral judgments and prosocial behavior, the relation between religiosity and
94                                 The study of prosocial behavior--altruism, cooperation, trust, and th
95 ed on understanding the role of signaling in prosocial behavior.
96 nation for the apparent absence of universal prosocial behavior.
97 y counteract this tendency and thus increase prosocial behavior.
98 mote protective affiliative interactions and prosocial behavior.
99 enging the view that religiosity facilitates prosocial behavior.
100 similarity, and numerous others give rise to prosocial behavior.
101 r hand, may actually be associated with less prosocial behavior.
102 atives, empathy may be the main motivator of prosocial behavior.
103 ave generally positive effects on normative 'prosocial' behavior, recent laboratory research suggests
104 alience to social-related cues and exhibited prosocial behaviors (e.g., social-conditioned place pref
105      Therefore, this commentary can show why prosocial behaviors are biased toward physically attract
106                                              Prosocial behaviors are ubiquitous across societies.
107 d co-opt midbrain reward circuits to promote prosocial behaviors critical for species survival.
108 ilance may have facilitated the evolution of prosocial behaviors in humans.
109 es live in highly social environments, where prosocial behaviors promote social bonds and cohesion an
110 n indicates that testosterone can also cause prosocial behaviors that are appropriate for increasing
111  length) and, second, the different types of prosocial behaviors that exist in social interactions.
112 hypothesized to be a critical facilitator of prosocial behaviors, but the link between empathy and pr
113 romantic and filial relationships, and other prosocial behaviors, such as trust and cooperation.
114  and other species alike regularly undertake prosocial behaviors-actions that benefit others without
115 triatal reward system in moral judgments and prosocial behaviors.
116 ocial interactions is critical for promoting prosocial behaviors.
117 e PVN or their terminals in the VTA enhanced prosocial behaviors.
118  the unique phenotype reflects dimensions of prosocial behaviors.
119 nks between exposure to science and moral or prosocial behaviors.
120 ot stop them carrying out previously learned prosocial behaviors.
121 es that oxytocin mainly enhances affiliative prosocial behaviors; the fear/stress theory suggests tha
122 ms to the form, development and variation in prosocial behaviour across societies.
123                                     Illusory prosocial behaviour could arise as a by-product of task
124 across societies and (3) societally variable prosocial behaviour develops concurrently with the respo
125 ata support the view that the development of prosocial behaviour is shaped by a psychology for respon
126  societies, we provide evidence that (1) the prosocial behaviour of adults is predicted by what other
127 erformance suggested a reduced expression of prosocial behaviour, associated with decreased grey matt
128 the awe elicited by extravagant displays and prosocial behaviour.
129 ly rated as less genetically influenced than prosocial behaviour.
130                                              Prosocial behaviours are encountered in the donation gam
131  to atypical social affiliation, and lack of prosocial behaviours in psychopathy, have yet to be syst
132 ability to strongly promote the emergence of prosocial behaviours, but they also create the possibili
133 rs than others, can enhance the evolution of prosocial behaviours.
134 roblems, conduct problems, peer problems and prosocial behaviours.
135 omists, attractiveness-related financial and prosocial biases are the result of preferences or prejud
136 rrent perspectives on attractiveness-related prosocial biases emphasize the contribution of evolution
137                                Financial and prosocial biases in favor of attractive adults have been
138 more important role in driving financial and prosocial biases toward attractive adults than previousl
139 provide an important service in highlighting prosocial biases toward attractive people from a cross-d
140  people are causally related to financial or prosocial biases toward them is weak or nonexistent.
141 vents monkeys from learning what actions are prosocial but does not stop them carrying out previously
142    There are numerous behaviours that appear prosocial but, on scrutiny, may not have been intended a
143 multiple facets of psychological well-being, prosocial character, and possibly mental health among yo
144  to the suggestion that well-being and other prosocial characteristics might be enhanced through trai
145 ferences predicted children's preference for prosocial characters and were influenced by parental val
146 ased the payoffs of mutual prosociality, and prosocial choice increased accordingly.
147 hs) would engage in direct reciprocity in a 'prosocial choice test' where a donor could select either
148  between selfish and generous motives during prosocial choice, consistent with ideas that the TPJ pro
149          Chimpanzees made significantly more prosocial choices after receiving their partner's assist
150 aling OT, monkeys increased the frequency of prosocial choices associated with reward to another monk
151 ative care behaviors are thought to scaffold prosocial cognitive processes.
152 th the right temporoparietal junction during prosocial, compared with self-relevant, choices.
153  as herd immunity This research examines how prosocial concern for vaccination, defined as people's p
154 udinal survey of 2,490 Americans showed that prosocial concern had a larger positive influence on vac
155                                Specifically, prosocial concern led to stronger intentions to vaccinat
156 density conditions, the benefits of inducing prosocial concern were due to greater perceived impact o
157 ship between dopaminergic mechanisms and two prosocial concerns at the core of a number of widely use
158 ting or modulating behavioral sensitivity to prosocial concerns.
159  be motivated by social, but not necessarily prosocial, concerns.
160                                       In the prosocial condition, patients' performance suggested a r
161  to decide for their best friend in a second prosocial condition, which required perspective taking.
162 unted less in self-choices compared with the prosocial condition.
163 te the discriminant validity between similar prosocial constructs and highlight the different prosoci
164 how phenomena such as altruistic punishment, prosocial contagion, self-other similarity, and numerous
165 drives learning only when we are acting in a prosocial context and signals a prosocial prediction err
166 ole of cognitive tendencies and selection of prosocial cultural variants.
167            Together our results suggest that prosocial decision-making is sustained by an intrinsic m
168 ther neural sensitivity to eudaimonic (e.g., prosocial decisions) and hedonic (e.g., selfish rewards
169   To identify the causal function of rTPJ in prosocial decisions, we administered focal high definiti
170 ly found across three independent groups for prosocial decisions.
171 ometabolic and neurofunctional correlates of prosocial development during early adolescence.
172 l overlooks the contribution of a relational/prosocial dimension to the enjoyment of negative emotion
173  the precise boundaries of this surprisingly prosocial disposition has implications for understanding
174 ether young children increase their level of prosocial donating in response to an upwards shift in ge
175                                            A prosocial effect of d-cycloserine was observed at a dose
176 derscoring a fear-reducing and strategically prosocial effect of testosterone on human social behavio
177          Big Gods are described as having a "prosocial" effect.
178 ndings are consistent with evidence that the prosocial effects are unique to MDMA relative to another
179 ltural variants were then selected for their prosocial effects in a long-term, cultural evolutionary
180  molecules of the decade due to its profound prosocial effects in nonvertebrate and vertebrate specie
181 peptide oxytocin (OXT) exerts anxiolytic and prosocial effects in the central nervous system of roden
182                        How it produces these prosocial effects is not known.
183 ear processing per se cannot account for the prosocial effects of amygdala inhibition.
184                                  (4) Can the prosocial effects of amygdala manipulations be explained
185 hat suppression of "fear" could underlie the prosocial effects of amygdala manipulations, our data st
186 e welcome Norenzayan et al.'s claim that the prosocial effects of beliefs in supernatural agents exte
187                                          The prosocial effects of MCR agonists may be mediated, in pa
188 g the neurochemical mechanisms mediating the prosocial effects of MDMA could help in the development
189 port for the idea that oxytocin produces the prosocial effects of MDMA.
190 opose that religious beliefs with incidental prosocial effects propagated via a long-term process of
191 ocessing, moral reasoning, and processing of prosocial emotions such as guilt and embarrassment may c
192       With the addition of the "with limited prosocial emotions" specifier within the diagnosis of co
193 ng-Embracing model to the use of stories for prosocial ends.
194                 While both appear to serve a prosocial function, they may represent separate mechanis
195                                     The term prosocial has often been taken to mean nice or neighbour
196 ealed that intranasal administration of the "prosocial" hormone oxytocin (OT) activates the frontal c
197 es differentially incorporate collaborative, prosocial ideals that are known to engage members of und
198 d choose between two tokens, with one being "prosocial" in that it rewarded both individuals (i.e., 1
199 useful to quantify individual differences in prosocial inclination that are not influenced by concern
200 ing interpersonal violations (Studies 1, 2), prosocial intentions (Study 3), and economic exploitatio
201 lated past event of helping others increased prosocial intentions to help the present person in need,
202 isodic simulation and memory to facilitating prosocial intentions.
203 al benefits of physical exercise with dyadic prosocial interaction, would result in OT response.
204 nships, which are founded on an enjoyment of prosocial interactions or concern for others.
205 ns oppose long-term aims or when selfish and prosocial interests collide.
206 study examines how messaging approaches in a prosocial intervention can influence not only the effect
207              Yet, determining what counts as prosocial is not as simple as it first appears.
208 cy of a standard ISG (S-ISG) and an enhanced prosocial ISG (P-ISG).
209 y, in part, be a product of declining use of prosocial language during Congressional debates.
210 icacy (e.g., passing bills), suggesting that prosocial language has an independent, direct effect on
211                                        Warm, prosocial language still predicted public approval when
212 1996 and 2014 found that declining levels of prosocial language strongly predicted public disapproval
213 cience includes more explicitly communal and prosocial language than does reproducibility.
214 remains unclear how the neural mechanisms of prosocial learning differ from those of self-relevant le
215 hus reveal a computational mechanism driving prosocial learning in humans.
216                                              Prosocial learning recruited similar brain areas as self
217 t human participants performed better during prosocial learning than during self-relevant learning, a
218 eural level, higher value sensitivity during prosocial learning was associated with stronger engageme
219 e as good at learning to avoid others' harm (prosocial learning) as they are at learning to avoid sel
220 ed how learning to protect others from pain (prosocial learning) differs from learning to protect one
221 y in the neural and behavioral efficiency of prosocial learning, which is predicted by trait empathy.
222 eir sgACC response is the most selective for prosocial learning.
223 jective values of choice alternatives during prosocial learning.
224                                          The prosocial manipulation may have inadvertently constraine
225 aging have 10% higher net present value, but prosocial messaging increases the likelihood that adopte
226 nificant difference across income groups for prosocial messaging.
227  the past oxytocin was conceived merely as a prosocial molecule that nonselectively facilitated affil
228                                              Prosocial morality appeared in wealthier post-Axial envi
229 orical cultures that were not concerned with prosocial morality or with public statement of belief.
230                    Determining the degree of prosocial motivation in vaccination behavior is challeng
231 A multifaceted construct, empathy includes a prosocial motivation or intention to help others in need
232 irming previous findings suggesting a common prosocial motivation underlying altruism and cooperation
233                                    Proactive prosocial motivations therefore systematically arise whe
234 ocial constructs and highlight the different prosocial motivations underlying economic game behaviour
235 cial dilemma game in which they could reveal prosocial motives towards an ingroup (ingroup-love) and
236 e benefit of increasing comprehension of the prosocial nature of the campaign would be limited if eve
237 sed on the individual's comprehension of the prosocial nature of the campaign.
238                                          The prosocial neuropeptide oxytocin (OXT) has been identifie
239 s in the WS region with the dysregulation of prosocial neuropeptides.
240 reasingly cooperative, altruistic, and other prosocial norms of interaction from exploitation, especi
241 individualistic participants but not in more prosocial ones.
242  were spontaneously prosocial, selecting the prosocial option at the same rate regardless of whether
243 ly, this was the case even when choosing the prosocial option was materially costly for the subject (
244 echanisms that support heightened or extreme prosocial or altruistic tendencies.
245 lations and time-locked ERPs when perceiving prosocial or antisocial agents.
246 ticipants read about individuals engaging in prosocial or antisocial behaviour, and rated the extent
247 f monetary offers designed to produce either prosocial or punishing behaviours.
248 ulatory roles of anger and guilt, as well as prosocial or selfish social preferences in a repeated so
249 embedded them in homogeneous networks of all prosocials or all egoists, or in heterogeneous networks
250 wards for themselves (self), another person (prosocial), or no one (control).
251 d reputation in the eyes of others) modulate prosocial orientation.
252 warmer temperatures are associated with more prosocial outcomes.
253 he same time as creating random variation in prosocial outcomes.
254                                      In more prosocial participants, amygdala activity encoded a soci
255 le a predictive division between proself and prosocial people and proves that people have attitude to
256  acting in a prosocial context and signals a prosocial prediction error conforming to classical princ
257 hat both partners alternated making choices, prosocial preference significantly increased, leading to
258  primate ACC is necessary for acquisition of prosocial preferences from vicarious reinforcement.
259                    However, the existence of prosocial preferences has been inferred post hoc from th
260 results contradict the suggested role of the prosocial preferences hypothesis and show how the comple
261                              The presence of prosocial preferences is thought to reduce significantly
262  of cooperation is the ability of those with prosocial preferences to alter their networks.
263 ecome an accepted paradigm that humans have "prosocial preferences" that lead to higher levels of coo
264       Preoperatively, all 6 actors displayed prosocial preferences, indicated by their greater tenden
265 when nodes are occupied by persons with more prosocial preferences, who tend to attract and keep more
266 rely different sub-populations is confirmed: prosocial punishers on the one hand, who behave fairly a
267 sting the diversity benefits of communal and prosocial purposes, we find that women publish more freq
268    Resulting from their greater cooperation, prosocials' relations are more stable, yielding substant
269                 Norenzayan et al. argue that prosocial religion develops through cultural evolution.
270 ltural evolutionary theory of the origins of prosocial religions and apply it to resolve two puzzles
271         Hence, we doubt whether Big Gods and prosocial religions are more effective than alternative
272 ngers and, simultaneously, (2) the spread of prosocial religions in the last 10-12 millennia.
273                                    Moreover, prosocial religions often do not prevent conflict within
274 iscuss Abrahamic religions as the best-known prosocial religions, but the evidence shows that the cas
275 questions concerning the evolution of karmic prosocial religions.
276 ion have facilitated the rise of large-scale prosocial religions.
277 ultural group selection as an explanation of prosocial religiosity, we propose an alternative that vi
278                                     In turn, prosocial religious beliefs and practices spread and agg
279 ittle attention to developmental accounts of prosocial religious beliefs.
280 ial acts did not require personal sacrifice, prosocial responses increased steadily as children matur
281 nts that view maternal behaviour as tuned to prosocial responsiveness, by showing that vital elements
282  reward funds facilitates the maintenance of prosocial rewarding but prevents its invasion, and that
283 at are shared exclusively among cooperators (prosocial rewarding).
284 an sometimes select against the evolution of prosocial rewarding.
285                 Capuchins were spontaneously prosocial, selecting the prosocial option at the same ra
286 er, the evolutionary foundation of the human prosocial sentiment remains poorly understood, largely b
287 the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire prosocial subscale (AMD, 0.5; 95% CI, >0.0-0.9).
288 2,16,18), powerful moralizing 'big gods' and prosocial supernatural punishment tend to appear only af
289 ecent commentators have suggested that these prosocial tendencies arise from our unique capacity to u
290 xamining the cognitive mechanisms underlying prosocial tendencies has focused on the facilitating rol
291                                              Prosocial tendencies may thus trump egocentric biases in
292 dence shows reductions in fairness and other prosocial tendencies when self-regulation fails.
293                                              Prosocial third-party punishment (3PP) is a punitive beh
294 e associated with lower reward dependence, a prosocial trait.
295  a pattern of differential relations between prosocial traits and game behaviours.
296 ent and recompensation games with respect to prosocial traits from the Big Five and HEXACO models of
297 te strong and possibly runaway selection for prosocial traits, without requiring group selection, kin
298 ooperation by dividing people in proself and prosocial types, or appealing to forms of external contr
299  excellent opportunity to quantify and model prosocial vaccination as its primary objective was to av
300 de causal evidence that drawing attention to prosocial (vs.

 
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