ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Friday, April 4, 2025
How humans across cultures and historical periods conceptualize relationships
Credit:
Yin Wang.
Throughout
the course of their lives, humans are known to establish and navigate an
intricate web of social relationships, ranging from friendships to family
bonds, romances, acquaintances, professional relationships and, today, online
interactions. Over the past decades, some behavioral scientists have been
trying to better understand how people make sense of these different types of
relationships.
The overall organization and effects on
the well-being of different kinds of social relationships has been widely
investigated. However, how people conceptualize them (i.e., mentally make sense
of different types of bonds) is not yet fully understood.
Researchers at Beijing Normal University
carried out a study aimed at better understanding how humans across time and
from different cultural backgrounds make sense of their relationships.
Their paper, published in Nature
Human Behavior, offers new interesting insights into human relationships,
which were gathered using a combination of online surveys, laboratory
experiments and computational tools.
"We collected online survey data
from 19 regions worldwide, collected in-person interview data from the
matrilineal society Mosuo tribe in China, and retrieved data from literature of
different historical timepoints," Yin Wang, senior author of the paper,
told Phys.org.
"We then used dimension reduction and clustering methods on these data to find the basic organization of human relationships."
Animation summarizing the FAVEE-HPP model.
Credit: Yin Wang.
Wang and his colleagues gathered
responses to an online survey from people living in 19 regions across five
continents and summarized the results of laboratory experiments, ultimately
analyzing information about the relationships between 20,427 people worldwide
using computational models.
Notably, they also analyzed
documents containing information about the relationships of people during
different historical periods, spanning across 3,000 years.
Building on the results of their
analyses, the researchers created a framework that outlines the universal
structure of relationships across cultures and historical periods. This
framework was dubbed the FAVEE (Formality, Activeness, Valence, Exchange, Equality)-
HPP (hostile, private and public) model.
"Our study reveals this
fundamental framework called the FAVEE-HPP model," explained Wang.
"It shows that humans use the
five dimensions, which are formality, activeness, valence, exchange, and
equality, and the three categories, which are hostile, private, and public, to
represent their social relationships. We've also proven that this framework is
consensual across different cultures, societies, and historical
timepoints."
Perhaps the most interesting achievement of the recent study by Wang and his colleagues is that it provides a computational framework that can be used to represent human relationships in a quantifiable and organized way.
Credit: Cheng et al. (Nature Human Behaviour, 2025).
A
five-dimensional model of human relationships (FAVEE model). Credit: Nature Human Behaviour (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41562-025-02122-8
This
model could soon be used to study the links between different dimensions of
relationships and real-world phenomena, such as divorce, perceived social
supports, well-being and even life expectancy.
"In future follow-up studies, we
are interested in exploring how relationship representations are constructed
during human development and how we form idiosyncratic impressions on
relationships," added Wang. "In addition, we plan to probe individual
differences and context differences in representing relationships."
Wang and his colleagues published the
data they collected on GitHub, thus it
could soon also be used by other research groups to further explore the complex
underpinnings of human relationships.
In the future, they hope that the new universal model of relationships outlined in their paper will contribute to the understanding of human social networks and the patterns shaping their evolution across generations or in different geographical regions.
by Ingrid Fadelli , Phys.org
Source: How humans across cultures and historical periods conceptualize relationships