“…In so doing, we could go further in solving discrepancies within the prosocial decision-making literature, such as delineating more specific categories of prosocial decisionmaking within the identified task-space, which may only reflect the top level of a prosocial decision-making hierarchy. For example, active decisions to forgive (Fourie et al, 2020), normenforcing decisions (i.e., social influence on agreements or valuation) (Chang & Sanfey, 2013;Wu et al, 2016;Yang et al, 2019;Zinchenko & Arsalidou, 2018), and third-party altruistic punishment decisions for norm violations (Buckholtz et al, 2008;David et al, 2017;Fehr et al, 2004;Jordan et al, 2016) were not considered in this study because we sought to only examine decisions that directly benefited another person, but may reflect more specific prosocial decisions under the umbrella of the identified categories.…”