Ottawa Citizen

EMPATHY EXPERT FACES BULLYING ACCUSATION­S

Colleagues of renowned researcher talk of terrifying work environmen­t

- CLEVE R. WOOTSON JR.

If there is anyone who knows the potentiall­y devastatin­g effects of hurt feelings, it is Tania Singer.

The 48-year-old neuroscien­tist has spent her career looking at the physical, social, even economic benefits of making people more empathetic.

She has mapped the brains of people watching their loved ones experienci­ng pain, for example, and sought scientific answers to questions about the roots of good and evil that have puzzled humans since the dawn of sentience.

One of Singer’s goals, she wrote in a 2013 book about compassion training, was to “support the developmen­t of a more caring and sustainabl­e society ... With this book, we aspire to bring more attention to compassion in our society.”

But recently, the attention has focused on Singer’s lab in Leipzig, Germany — and what former colleagues say is a pattern of bullying and intimidati­on from one of the world’s foremost researcher­s on empathy.

The complaints — from eight current and former colleagues who told Science Magazine this month that the bad behaviour dates back several years — painted a picture of a work environmen­t so dire that the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences and Singer agreed to a year-long sabbatical to “cool down” the situation.

In a statement to The Washington Post, Singer confirmed “stress and strain” between her and colleagues but denied the worst accusation­s.

Through it all, she said, her research has been above reproach.

Several people in her lab, meanwhile, said that behind groundbrea­king empathy research that has been featured in National Geographic and at the World Economic Forum was a work environmen­t that Singer made toxic.

“Whenever anyone had a meeting with her there was at least an even chance they would come out in tears,” one colleague told Science Magazine.

That person, like all but one, spoke to the magazine under the condition of anonymity because of fear of retaliatio­n.

Some said Singer’s harshest words were directed at women who became pregnant — and notified her that they would have to take time off to care for their newborns.

“People were terrified. They were really, really afraid of telling her about their pregnancie­s,” one former colleague told Science Magazine. “For her, having a baby was basically you being irresponsi­ble and letting down the team.”

For colleagues, it could be a tale of two Singers.

She was a creative researcher, gifted at finding funding and making the contacts necessary to green light projects, they told the magazine.

“Her superpower is vision,” one colleague said. In 2015, after terrorist attacks in Paris, she gave an inspiring speech to colleagues saying that the violent acts were exactly the reason the world needed their research.

But working with her day in and day out took a toll, they said, alleging threats and emotional abuse. She would insult their work and their abilities, they said.

Bethany Kok, a former lab member, said Singer had an angry outburst a day after Kok informed her that she was pregnant with twins.

“She started screaming at me how she wasn’t running a charity, how I was a slacker and that I was going to work twice as hard for the time I would be gone,” Kok told Science Magazine.

A few weeks later, Kok said, she miscarried one of the twins and missed a lab meeting for an urgent medical appointmen­t.

“I got an email from Tania telling me that she wasn’t paying me to go to the doctor, that clearly I wasn’t using good judgment, and I was no longer allowed to go to the doctor during work hours.”

Kok told the magazine that she no longer has the email.

Singer declined a phone interview, saying she was travelling, but in a lengthy statement to The Washington Post, she said the accusation­s were the result of “a subgroup of former scientists ... with strong group dynamics aiming at damaging my reputation.”

She insisted that the group she was responsibl­e for had never violated scientific rules or discrimina­ted against anyone, especially pregnant women. Her group was working on a “unique large-scale longitudin­al training study,” she said, and the “workload and pressure increasing lead to stress and strain that in turn sometimes caused inadequate communicat­ion with my staff in problem situations.”

Still, she said she has apologized “wholeheart­edly” to staff and engaged in a mediation process, agreed to the sabbatical and handed over management functions.

But she said she took strong issue with specific claims about how she treated people.

“I never denied any parental leave or declared that career and motherhood are incompatib­le, as I believe the opposite is true,” her statement to The Post said.

“I did not as accused feel that pregnant women let the team down (these are all personal interpreta­tions that can’t be proven.) I also actively supported women in science (among them a mother with multiple children).

“I never forbid anybody to go to the doctor in working hours and I certainly can’t be made responsibl­e for the premature loss of a twin baby during pregnancy.”

In a statement, the Max Planck Institute said it learned of complaints against Singer in early 2017 and subsequent­ly had “a great number of discussion­s with employees.”

The institute also probed Singer’s research but evaluated it as excellent.

By the end of 2017, Singer asked for the sabbatical to work on a book and explore other research.

“Following on the sabbatical, from 2019 onwards, it is envisioned that Prof. Singer will head, at her own request, a considerab­ly smaller working group for social neuroscien­ce,” the society said. “The relevant details are currently being discussed.”

She started screaming at me how she wasn’t running a charity, how I was a slacker and that I was going to work twice as hard for the time I would be gone. BETHANY KOK, Researcher

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Tania Singer

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