Deutsche Welle (English edition)

The weird science of empathy

Why do we feel more empathy for some people in a crisis than others? Empathy motivates us and works in mysterious ways. Scientists have been investigat­ing the pros and cons of this most human of feelings.

- Edited by: Carla Bleiker

The war in Ukraine has triggered a flood of humanitari­an assistance. Along with donations from across the world to aid organizati­ons, people in Europe are opening their homes to refugees and driving en masse to offer aid at the country's borders.

The EU has pledged to send at least €500 million to Ukraine, while the US has pledged at least $12 billion.

This behavior begs questions: How long will the support last? Maybe you've already felt your attention waning. While the war may have consumed your conversati­ons a month ago, now it's a side thought — you scroll through the news without reading.

And perhaps you're also wondering: Why the massive humanitari­an effort for Ukraine, while programs supporting crises in other parts of the world — like the World Food Program — are facing billion dollar deficits?

Paul Slovic has been studying psychologi­cal responses to humanitari­an crises for more than 50 years. He has named mass psychologi­cal phenomena which occur during crises and then impede our ability to help.

Slovic's work centers around a simple concept: When it comes to helping suffering people in crisis situations, we can't trust our feelings. If we allow ourselves to be guided merely by them, we fall victim to a kind

of paralysis that dupes us into doing nothing at all.

Psychic numbing: The more people die, the less we care

Through experiment­s, Slovic has found that people are more likely to feel the pain of — and be inclined to help — a single person rather than many. Once someone realizes that a victim is just one of thousands, compassion starts to fade.

This was observed in a neurologic­al study conducted by brain researcher­s at the University of Lübeck in northern Germany. Neuroscien­tists have mapped out a core network of human empathy in the brain, which is composed of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), middle cingulate cortex, and bilateral anterior insula. The researcher­s set out to measure how this network responded to stories about tragedy.

Each of the 20 participan­ts in the study were instructed to listen to 20 news stories broadcast by radio. Some of the stories were neutral, while others

described tragedies. Some included a single person, others included many.

The study found that the empathy network was far more engaged by emotional stories that only included a single person than by emotional stories that included many.

The more victims, the less difference we think we can make — so we do nothing

Slovic also coined the term pseudoinef­ficacy, which describes the false notion that we can't make a difference in the world at all, so there's no point in trying.

In an experiment, Slovic and his team presented participan­ts with a story about a little girl who was starving. She had a name, face and a country. They found that around half the participan­ts were willing to donate money to an aid organizati­on to help the little girl.

They presented the exact same story to a second group of participan­ts with just one change: They included a statistic that mentioned there are millions of children like her in her region that are starving.

"We thought that would increase the motivation to donate. It had just the opposite effect. The donations dropped almost in half," Slovic said.

A well-known 'villain' like Putin helps increase empathy

Ukraine has seen some of the highest levels of humanitari­an mobilizati­on in decades. People in rich Western countries with the capacity to help are paying attention, at least for now. Psychologi­sts say this crisis has sparked action in the West for a few reasons.

First, they say, in order to empathize with suffering, there needs to be a clear victim. In order to have a clear victim, there needs to be a clear aggressor — in this case, Russian President Vladimir Putin.

"We see him on television every day, we know him, we know his face. We feel he is an identified villain, whereas the villains in these other genocides, no one knows their names," said Slovic, who is from the US.

There is also a kind of selfishnes­s to the West's response to Ukraine, he added.

"We feel [Putin is] a threat to us, whereas we don't feel that the attacks on the Uighurs or the Yazidis or the Rohingya or people in Africa are a direct threat to us," he said.

This feeling, along with Ukraine's proximity to Europe, makes it easier for people living in Europe or the US to put themselves in the shoes of the victims and feel inclined to help.

The sense of warmhearte­dness toward Ukrainian refugees as opposed to refugees from countries like Afghanista­n likely has to do with something called in-group favoritism, psychologi­sts say.

As humans, we place ourselves into groups, and feel more empathy for others in our group, said psychologi­st Mark Leary. For people in Poland for example — a country whose policy toward refugees from Middle Eastern countries has not been very welcoming — people probably see their Ukrainian neighbors as part of their in-group, unlike Syrians.

"It should come as no surprise that the conflict in Ukraine is generating a mobilizati­on never seen in 160 years. Not just because of the geographic­al proximity, but essentiall­y because Ukrainians are perceived as similar to us," said Jean Decety, a University of Chicago neuroscien­tist, referring to attitudes of people in the West.

He said people naturally vary in how much empathy they feel for others depending on specific signals, and one of those signals is group member

ship and shared identity. People empathize better with people who share their ethnicity, national background, values, social norms, religion, political attitudes or goals, Decety said.

This has also been proven in the brain: In a 2009 study, researcher­s measured how white participan­ts responded to videos featuring people of their own skin color experienci­ng pain and Chinese people experienci­ng pain. They found that the white participan­ts' neurologic­al capacity for empathy was higher when they saw images of people with the same skin color.

What can we do to change?

Leary said that although our response to members of our ingroup is understand­able from an emotional and psychologi­cal standpoint, that doesn't mean it's logical.

He said people should be more even-handed with their assistance. If they realize that refugees fleeing conflict are all more or less in the same situation — they are traumatize­d after leaving their homes and countries due to violence and danger — then it shouldn't matter whether they are culturally similar to them or not.

Slovic says in order to fight the psychologi­cal numbing we feel when confronted with humanitari­an crises, we need to first understand that it exists and that it is not rational. Our mind tricks us into thinking we can't help when in fact we can.

The more people realize the existence of irrational, emotional phenomena, the more they will learn not to trust them, and will opt instead to evaluate their ability to help through a more logical lens. The world will be better off as a result.

 ?? ?? Ukrainian refugees have received a lot of help from rich Western countries. Why is that?
Ukrainian refugees have received a lot of help from rich Western countries. Why is that?

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