Hidden Brain - Group Think
Episode Date: September 20, 2021How do the groups you identify with shape your sense of self? Do they influence the beer you buy? The way you vote? Psychologist Jay Van Bavel says our group loyalties affect us more than we realize, ...and can even shape our basic senses of sight, taste and smell. If you like our work, please consider supporting it! See how you can help at support.hiddenbrain.org. And to learn more about human behavior and ideas that can improve your life, subscribe to our newsletter at news.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
When Nelson Mandela became South Africa's first black president in 1994,
he had big dreams for his bitterly divided country.
We and our inter-government, that we shall build a society,
a rainbow nation, at peace with itself and the world.
He had spent a lifetime fighting the racist apartheid regime,
including more than a quarter century in prison.
He was a heroic figure already by that time.
But to many white South Africans, they
saw him as a criminal and a terrorist.
This is psychologist, J. Van Bevel.
As president of the United South Africa, Nelson Mandela
or Mediba, as he was known to his supporters,
needed to find a way for the people in his rainbow nation
to see themselves as South Africans first.
Other politicians might have turned to speeches and policies.
Mediba turned to sports.
Placid continues, off side by New Zealand.
He used the Rudby World Cup, which was being hosted in South Africa.
And during the apartheid era, South Africa had been banned from competition.
And the South African team was known as the Spring Box,
and they were beloved by the white South Africans and despised by the black population.
But what Mandela did was he went out into the podium,
not just as the president, but as a fan he
had the Green Springboks cap in Jersey.
And he used it as a way to make a statement that we're one team, we're one country now,
and he took a symbol of oppression and used it as a symbol of togetherness.
The president to the captain.
The Springboks team captain, Francois Pinar, remembers the moment Madiba walked into the
team's locker room.
It was before the finals against New Zealand.
He said, good luck boys and they turned around.
And my number was on his back and that was me.
I couldn't see the anthem because I knew I would cry.
I was just so proud to be South Africa that day.
The match was a nail-biter.
It went into overtime.
South Africa ended up winning 15-12.
Across the country, black and white South Africans cheered together in triumph.
Trump's weapon, Nelson Mandela, is cheering along with the whole of the stadium.
The sea flags.
Nelson Mandela knew that getting enemies to cheer for the same sports team
was only a start.
Much work remained to heal the wounds of apartheid.
But his intervention reveal how a psychologically astute leader
can find ways to create connections among people.
Even better enemies.
This week on Hidden Brain, how group identities bring us together,
tear us apart, and transform our understanding of the world.
When we think about what we do and why we do it,
we often assume we are acting intentionally
and autonomously.
I do something because I want to do it.
I choose to do it.
In recent years, social scientists have shown that this is often not true.
Our actions, our preferences, the very way we see the world, is filtered through the
prism of our group identities.
This idea has fascinated Javan Bavill for a long time. He's a psychologist at New York University.
He has studied how our group loyalties pull us together, how they tear us apart,
and how we can apply what we have learned about the science of group identity
to build better lives and better communities.
Javan Bavill, welcome to Hidden Brain. Thanks for having me. science of group identity to build better lives and better communities.
J. Van Bevel, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me.
I want to start by talking about some of the ways in which our group identities can draw us together with other people, J. You grew up in Canada.
And I understand your parents told you to sow the Canadian national flag onto
your backpack. Did you ever find yourself bonding with other
Canadians when you traveled overseas?
Yeah, so this is a great piece of advice you learn if you're ever going to travel in Canada.
Your family, your friends will tell you to sew a Canadian flag on your backpack so that
it serves as a signal to other people in other parts of the world who you are and where
you're from.
Canada is a reasonably well-liked and respected country, but it does something even better, which is it allows you to connect with people.
So I was actually in my first-ever international trip in high school, and we were in Venice,
you know, one of the most beautiful, interesting cities in the world, some of the best food in the world.
And I was a Canadian teenager, so I found the first McDonald's that I've seen in probably a week.
And I wandered in and I'm in line to get some chicken nuggets.
And this young teenage girl comes up and just starts talking to me in English.
And it quickly dawned on me that she saw that I had a Canadian maple leaf on a sweater that I was wearing.
And so it was her way of seeing that we shared this in common.
And if I was anywhere in Canada, I doubt she would have come up and started talking to me.
But since we were all the way around the world, that identity was something that bonded
us in an unfamiliar situation.
Yeah, so that's fascinating because of course, as you just pointed out, if you were both
in Toronto or Ottawa, the fact that you were both Canadians would have been utterly unremarkable.
But in Venice, that portion of your identities stood out.
Yeah, so it turns out that one of the most powerful ways
to trigger an identity is to be a minority in a situation.
When you're all surrounded by fellow Canadians,
you're not thinking about yourself for the most part
in terms of being a Canadian, but it's really powerful
when you're both, you know, in a foreign land.
That thing that might otherwise be really mundane
becomes really significant to you.
We've all had experiences like this.
We know what it's like to be part of a group, to belong to a club.
As a psychologist, Jay has discovered that our group identities are more than a source
of connection.
They tell us what we should care about.
I ran this study in Ottawa, which is the capital of Canada,
in collaboration with a colleague
who was a professor at Carlton University,
and he set up a table in the Byward market,
which is kind of a famous old market in Ottawa.
And he pulled people who were walking by
and offered them a choice between taste test.
They were able to sample honey or maple syrup.
And then we randomly flipped a coin
and assigned people to one of two conditions.
Half of the people were primed
to think about their personal identity.
So they talked about like books they liked
as an individual.
The other half of the people were primed
to think about their Canadian identity.
And what we found is that when they were primed
with their individual identity,
they tended to like the taste of honey and maple syrup
roughly the same. But when they were primed with their individual identity, they tended to like the taste of honey and maple syrup, roughly the same, but when they were primed with their Canadian identity, they liked the maple syrup
more than the honey. And so what it suggests is that when your identity is salient, it makes
you prefer things that are associated with that identity. And for Canada, maple syrup is one
of the big ones. We literally have the Maple Leaf on our national flag. We have a strategic
national reserve of maple syrup.
So Canada takes maple syrup pretty seriously.
So companies that are smart about group identity
can sometimes use this to spur sales.
Tell me what Moulson Breweries did in their IAM Canadian ad.
When I was a teenager, Moulson Breweries,
which is one of the biggest beer brewery in the entire country,
came up with this really incredible ad, and it's just this guy walks on stage. There was a teenager, Moulson Brewery, which is one of the biggest beer brewery in the entire country,
came up with this really incredible ad,
and it's just this guy walks on stage.
Hey, I'm not a lumberjack or a fur trader,
and I don't live in any glue or eat lumber or own a dog sled.
And he just goes on this rant about what it means to be Canadian,
and in particular how it's different from an American.
I have a Prime Minister, not a President.
I speak English and French, not American, and I pronounce it about.
It had a Canadian flag flying in the background to talk about hockey being the national support.
So all these things that Canadians really cherish is part of who they are and part of their culture.
And Canadians often don't have a very strong sense of identity and this ad captured it. The field is a coach.
And an ace pronounced said, not Zed!
Zed!
Canada is the second largest landmass,
the first nation in working,
and the best part of America.
My name is Joe, and I am Canadian.
And this ad, you know, won a number of awards
because it signaled to Canadians
something really important, like who am I?
But at the same time, it also increased sales very dramatically for
Moulson Brewery because it resonated with people's national identity.
Group identities can influence the beer we drink, the cars we drive,
the clothes we wear. But
they can also do something even more significant. They can shape our basic perceptions. What we
see here even smell.
I asked Jay about a study out of the University of Sussex involving a very stinky t-shirt.
This has to be one of my favorite studies.
Yeah, so this was Ron in the UK
and they wanted to see how identity might shape our smell.
And so they used a very clever trick
to manipulate people's social identity.
And then they had them smell the stinky shirt,
which they had had a research assistant wear this shirt
for like a week sweating in it, exercising in it, not taking it off, and then they put it in this like sealed bin,
and they had participants come in and smell this shirt. And what they did was they manipulated
this shirt so it either had a logo from the rival university, which was the University of
Brighton, or the other half the students got to see this with a Sussex, University of Sussex
logo.
And so what they found is that when people were primed
to think that this was an out group member shirt,
they thought it was much more disgusting,
a much more putrid and odorous,
then when they thought that exact same smelling shirt
was from a member of their own in-group.
And so it suggests that what we find disgusting
is determined also by our identity
and who
we define as an in-group and out-group.
So this is a remarkable study because in some ways I think it's uncontroversial and unsurprising
to say that people are loyal to their groups, but I think the surprising insight from this
kind of research is that groups don't just tell us what kind of foods to like or which
politicians to support, they actually shape the very way we see the world.
Yeah, I mean, what we're trying to argue
and what the growing body of research suggests
is that these identities are a lens
that shape all kinds of our senses.
They shape how we're smelling and interpreting smells,
what we're seeing, maybe what we're hearing.
And so they help provide a way of interpreting information
as it comes in through all our senses.
a way of interpreting information as it comes in through all our senses.
One last example I want to look at about the power of groups to shape how we see and what we see, Jay, you tell the story of the 1966 World Cup soccer finals between England and Germany.
What happened during the finals?
So this might be one of the most famous and controversial games of all time.
In the dying minutes of the match,
the jubilant English supporters nerves
who were strained to a breaking point.
The World Cup was within England's reach.
It was tied and it went to extra minutes.
And there was a shot by this English player.
And it went off the crossbar, and it came down and landed
very close to the goal line and then bounced out.
Goal claimed England. Now No goal protested the Germans.
And all the English players celebrated, they thought this was the, you know, World Cup winning goal.
The referee consulted the linesman who had been in line with the posts.
And goal it was.
And there's huge debate over whether that goal actually crossed the line.
And so to this day, there's still controversy
about whether this crossed the line.
And so what seemed to happen here
is that those players wanted to interpret
this ball as going over the line and being a winning goal.
The German players did not.
And so I spent an entire day like watching old videos
and slow motion and pausing them to see if the goal
actually crossed the line.
I looked up a study from Oxford University saying it didn't cross the line.
And so I do not think he scored.
It looked like it came down right on the goal line and bounced out.
However, the same player scored later and over time.
And so England would have won anyways.
We see the same things in all kinds of sports all over the world, Jay.
Fans of different teams will see different things happen on the field, and each of them is completely sure that what they
saw, in fact, is objective reality.
Yeah.
And sports fans often think the referees are, you know, unfair to them because they're
seeing everything through their own lens.
In fact, in Canada, there's one song that's banned from all the hockey arenas, and it's
called Three Blind Mice, which people used to play, the home teams used to play when they didn't like a call, to imply that
the three rafts were biased and blind.
And so this turns out that this is like a really deeply rooted problem for people, they're
so used to filtering it through their own lands, they get very upset at officials.
The passion that we feel for our favorite sports teams can quickly lead to feelings of us versus them,
whether that them we're talking about our referees or fans of our rival team.
It makes sense that when we care deeply about something, we'll feel a sense of kinship with the people who share our views
and a lack of connection with people who disagree with us. But it turns out, a shared passion isn't needed to trigger the psychological effects of
group identity.
One study published in the 1970s randomly assigned volunteers to one of two groups.
The members of the first group were supposed to like the artist Paul Clay.
Members of the second group were supposed to lack the artist Wassily Kandinsky. This I think is one of the most important studies in the
history of psychology, maybe in the history of the social sciences. So this was a
study run by Henri Tashfel and his colleagues. He ran this study where he
basically just randomly assigned youths to one of two groups and he did it on
just trivial information. So what type of abstract art they liked and
These young people didn't know these artists at all and in fact it didn't matter who they actually liked
He just flipped a coin and gave them false feedback anyways
The volunteers in the clay and Kandinsky camps were then told to divvy up money among people in the different groups
And what he found is that the moment
that you're part of a team or part of a group,
you will give more money to members of your in-group
and less money to the out-group.
Even if you never interact or meet those people,
even if you never expect that they'll meet you,
and the thing he also found is that what people really care
about is maximizing the difference in money
they give to the in-group and out-group.
So they'll actually give in-group members less if it means giving out-group members evenly
in way less.
What's remarkable about the study, of course, is that people are forming these loyalties
to groups that they've been assigned for really no very good reason, and yet within a few
minutes almost, they are behaving as if these are long-lost brothers, and they're treating them as if they're members of an in-group tribe.
Yes, and this is something, you know, that it's... you might be skeptical when you hear these
results, and I was too. And then I ran studies like this, you know, in Canada and the US,
at many universities and online. And I've seen the same pattern over and over again.
The moment that people are signed to a team or a group,
even though they often can know it's a coin flip
that's determining this,
means that they like those people more.
They wanna be friends with them.
It shapes their automatic evaluations
of those individuals.
And we ran a study where NYU students
thought they were interacting in economic decisions
with members of NYU,
which is their members of their own in group,
or Columbia, which is a high status school
across New York City.
And what they did was they would give more money
to NYU students and Columbia students.
But what was even more interesting is
when they saw NYU students win money,
they actually had a brain response
that suggested that they were feeling
as if they had won the money.
And so what it suggests is what is referred to in the literature as basking and reflected
glory is that when your in-group does well, it makes you feel good. You have a response
in your brain as if you want or something good happened to you. And the same thing I
think happens to sports fans. You can be sitting at home watching the TV all alone and running around
and jumping and cheering as if you've accomplished something when your team wins.
And this is what we found in the lab.
What do you think explains this enormous gravitational force that groups exert on us, Jay?
Why is it that our minds are so attuned to the needs of our groups, even when those groups
are completely arbitrary?
There's a couple of key factors that determine
why we're so attracted to groups.
I think the deepest one is it's something in our biology.
So humans evolved for almost the entirety of human history
in these small tribal communities.
And we're pretty flimsy creatures.
We don't have sharp teeth or poison or wings
to fly away for predator comms.
And so we survived by cooperating in groups
and coalitions within those groups. And so we survive by cooperating in groups and coalitions
within those groups.
And so we have those same tendencies.
And then what you have in a modern environment that matters
is that groups feel our need to belong.
You know, they help us gain status
if we're part of a successful group.
And they also give us a sense of distinctiveness.
If our group is different from others, it tells us a little bit in the world about who
we are.
Groups offer us a sense of belonging and they can bring out the best in us.
But the flip side of most in groups, there's an out group.
When we come back, how our group identity identities divide us and what we can do to harness the
power of groups to build a better world.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
We've seen how groups can pull us together, give us shared cultural touch points and become
an enduring source of resilience and comfort.
In our evolutionary past, our group identities were an important source of protection.
You will think that a force this powerful would also have downsides.
Throughout human history, we've seen numerous examples of how group loyalty is
can spill over into tribalism and xenophobia and lead to war and genocide. In
their new book The Power of Us, the psychologist J. Van Bevel and Dominic Packer
explore how group identities pull us together and
how they tear us apart.
They also look at how we can apply what we have learned about the science of group identity
to build a better world.
J-you tell a remarkable story of two brothers in southern Germany.
They were cobblers and together ran the Dastler brothers shoe factory around the time of the second world war.
The brothers had a falling out. What happened next?
So these brothers it was World War II, 1943 and the one brother
Addy, he and his wife climbed into the same shelter as his brother Rudolph's family and Addy said
according to legend, the dirty bastards are back again.
And we don't know if Addy was referring
to the allied warplanes who were coming to bomb them.
But Rudy apparently interpreted this
as an insult intended for himself and his family.
And so it triggered this decades-long feud
between these two brothers.
They ended up breaking up their company
and creating two shoe companies in the same town and
That might have been the end of it right, but what happened is it infected the psychology of all the town's people and so people on one side of the river of the town
Identified with Adi and the other side identified with the shoe company one by Rudy and it became known as the town of bent necks because people would walk around town looking down at the ground to see what shoes people were wearing.
And if you were wearing a shoes, the shoes from the other company, you went date them, you wouldn't be able to go in those stores, marriage was discouraged with people with the wrong shoes.
In fact, this feud went right to the grave, so these two brothers are literally buried at opposite ends of the town cemetery.
And this might seem like this is a small story.
It's just a little town in Germany.
But these companies, the two shoe companies
that were launched by them are now known as Adidas,
which was founded by Addy and Puma,
which was founded by Rudy.
These are two of the biggest companies in the world.
And this feud affected the psychology of everybody
because these shoes became a signal
about group membership and led to discrimination. So, you know, when I look out at the United States or
other countries, I feel there are endless examples of how our group loyalties divide us. The conflict
between the Dazzler brothers, you know, to me it seems absurd. You know, they're both German,
they're both cobblers, they both make sports shoes for heaven's sake.
Surely they have so much in common.
But of course, when we find ourselves
in the grip of deep divisions,
they don't seem absurd.
What explains this gap?
The Dazzler Brothers demonstrates something really deep
about human nature.
How easily we form groups and coalitions.
And this has been observed in every culture
on Earth that's ever been studied.
And to these people in this town, this doesn't seem absurd.
This seems deeply important and central to their life
and who they are.
And I think that's the thing psychologically
is whatever conflicts are driving your own life.
Seem real.
And the conflicts of other people halfway around the world
might seem absurd.
But it's very much the same psychology
that seems to be at play in all of these types of situations.
So many Americans increasingly believe
they don't just disagree with people on the other side,
but that people on the other side are inherently evil
or untrustworthy.
As a social scientist who studies group identity,
where are we on the spectrum between healthy disagreement and civil war?
What I've noticed is there's an increasing trend towards polarization that's linked to
out-group hate more than in-group love.
And this is where politics in the US and many places around the world
looks much more
like sectarianism because it's connected to our morality.
And what happens then is people on the in-group are good, but the out-group really is evil.
And you'll do anything you can to stop them.
You'll even support an in-group member or vote for a leader who you don't like or don't
respect or don't trust.
Simply because you can't let this evil out-group take control.
And so this is now a driving
factor behind many people in their decisions to vote, volunteer, donate money.
You've conducted studies into how these group-level disagreements spill over into our personal
lives. How do these political loyalties divide families at holiday gatherings, like Thanksgiving?
Research suggests that our Thanksgiving dinners are getting shorter.
By roughly half an hour over time, if you're interacting with family members in a place
where there's going to be disagreement politically, it becomes intolerable and people just, you
know, don't stick around for dessert, basically.
It's affected dating.
So I ran a study with radio station in New York City
at Trump's inauguration, and we found
the biggest form of discrimination we observed
is simply that people refuse to date somebody
who voted for the other party.
And so now there's in fact dating websites
dedicated specifically to your political preferences.
Are you serious?
There's blue Tinder and red Tinder now?
I don't know if it's called that.
There's one that's like a, if you're for Trump fans only and stuff like this. Yeah
So we we talked to you earlier about how our group loyalties and identity shape are very perceptions of reality
I want to talk about this idea and the context of group conflicts
You've conducted some interesting studies looking at Yankees fans
What do you find in terms of their perceptions when it comes to their enemies, the Red Sox?
Yeah, so one of the greatest sports rivalries in the country is between the New York Yankees
and the Boston Red Sox. And we've been able to run some studies up at Yankees Stadium
with Red Sox and Yankees fans. And what we found is that Yankees fans had distorted judgments of how close Fenway Park in Boston was.
So we gave them a map and asked them to draw
where they thought Boston was.
And they thought it was much closer to New York
than it actually was.
If you asked non-Fans, they were pretty accurate
in estimating how far away Fenway Park was.
But they're not threatened by this group
in the same way that Yankees fans are.
And so they're not distorting their perceptions in the same way the Yankees fans are and so they're not distorting their perceptions in the same way
And so this is something that is adaptive to people is if there's a threat in the environment
You got to get ready to act and seeing it as closer can sometimes trigger that reaction
But we see it with groups as well. I understand this also been similar work finding that people who perceive immigrants to be a greater threat
Can sometimes perceive them to be physically closer or perceive their home countries
to be physically closer than they actually are.
We've run a number of studies in New York
and around the rest of the country.
And what we find is that people who are threatened
by illegal immigration from Mexico
see Mexico City as much closer to the border than it is.
But also how many people they think are coming over the border.
They tend to overestimate the size of the group.
So the idea that group identity is like a lens through which we see the world.
I think this might explain why some things that we feel should provide objective answers
to complex social problems sometimes fail to do so.
There's been controversy in recent years about police shootings of civilians
and both protesters and police have assumed that the body cameras being worn by police officers,
these can provide an objective answer as to who's in the right. What are these protesters
and the police officials getting wrong, Jay? Well, the body cams have operated on the assumption
that if we just captured all in the cameras, that it's going to dramatically reduce police violence because it's going to keep people honest.
And the problem with that is that people, when they look at these videos in a court, the
jury, for example, is biased in how they interpret them.
So there is research from NYU showing that if you identify with the police and you watch
one of these videos of a conflict between a police officer and the suspect, you see the suspect at fault and you're looking more at the suspect and
therefore you're getting the information they're doing something wrong.
If you actually don't identify at the police, you are looking at the police officer to see
what they're doing wrong and coming to a very different conclusion.
So simply having the video is not going to be enough to solve these problems and necessarily
reduce conflict with the place.
I want to ask you what all this means for the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, you and I are having this conversation, Jay, a significant number of Americans are resistant to
getting vaccinated against COVID-19. And the data seems to suggest that the death rates and
infection rates are rising primarily among
the unvaccinated.
And I think the response of many public health officials is to say, you know, let's present
people with the data, but of course, that doesn't seem to change people's mind.
And as I'm hearing what you are saying about group identities and the ways in which conversations
about the pandemic have become politicized, I think I'm starting to see why it is that
rational fact-based
approach often is ineffective. If there was ever a moment where we would want to test a hypothesis
about whether facts and risks actually make people rational, we have tested it during the pandemic.
And what we've seen since the very beginning, since January of 2020 in the US, is that Republicans have seen the pandemic unfolding
very differently than Democrats.
And the leaders of the Republicans,
this is Donald Trump, have downplayed it.
And this affected people's judgments of risk.
It affected willingness to engage in spatial
and social distancing.
And we've studied that in my own lab and found that,
over time, the partisan gap between Democrats and Republicans in their willingness to engage in distancing actually increased as the pandemic spread.
You might expect the opposite, which is that as people learn more about the risks, as people dying, getting the hospital in your local state or city, you would actually follow the guidelines more.
You wouldn't be guided by a partis If anything, we found the exact opposite. And now you're seeing that with vaccines.
The single biggest predictor of vaccine hesitancy
continues to be identification with the Republican party.
32% of Republicans don't plan to get the vaccine.
We're only 3% of Democrats don't plan to.
So that's 10 times as many people are vaccine hesitants
on that side of the political aisle.
I mean, I mean, the other way to sort of describe what you just said is that our commitment to our groups and our group identities in some ways can be stronger than our commitments
to our own safety.
Yeah, group identities don't seem that important when you're talking about, you know, a baseball
game, but they matter a great deal in a pandemic. And if they are stronger than our commitment to reality
and preserving the safety of not only ourselves,
but our family, our friends, our co-workers,
that tells you precisely how powerful these things are.
And if you're willing to continue to tune into TV stations
or social media that's affirming your identity,
it can lead you to have a very bad
misunderstanding of the risks that are presented to you in the world around.
JNS colleagues have looked at how social media in particular exacerbates
tribal loyalties and group divisions. We explored some of this research in an earlier episode.
It was titled Screaming Into the Void.
The important thing to understand about social media
is that nearly four billion people are on social media now.
And the average social media user scrolls
through 300 feet of news feed a day.
So that means if you have a six inch iPhone or Android,
that means you're scrolling down 600 times. It's the height of the statue you're Wow. That's how much you're reading each day. And so you're not reading things very deeply. You're just kind of scrolling through and seeing what catches your attention.
That's why they call it attention economy.
We've run a number of studies with hundreds of thousands of people and we found that the language
people are using seems to break through in this attention economy.
So when people use powerful moral emotional language around political topics, it seems to break through in this attention economy. So when people use powerful moral, emotional language
around political topics,
it seems to go more viral.
People are 15 to 20% more likely to share it.
But what happens is who's sharing it?
It's people who are part of your own political in-group.
It doesn't cross over to the other side
when you use that language.
And we have a new study out where we found that
the biggest single predictor of
making something go viral is dunking on the out group, saying something negative about
the other side. And that's 67% more likely to get shared. And so people learn this by getting
reinforced. And they realize this is the language that wins on social media.
You've also conducted a study looking at the effectiveness of fact checking partisan beliefs.
What do you find, Jay?
Yeah, we've been trying to study what works in terms of fact checking.
There is some evidence that if you give people nudges to focus on accuracy, they'll kind
of pause and reflect and be more accurate and be less likely to believe or share misinformation.
We have new data suggesting that that doesn't really work
for people at the political extremes.
Their identity is overpowering these nudges for accuracy.
So we're going to have to think about addressing
those people in different ways if we're going to want
to reduce misinformation.
Across so many dimensions of our lives,
our group identity shape, our perceptions, our choices, and our behavior.
They can cause us to act with cruelty and aggression.
They can also prompt us to show compassion and generosity to what others.
When we come back, how we can harness and redirect the power of groups
to improve our health, our communities, and the well-being of the planet.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Our social worlds shape what we see.
They offer us comfort in the face of threat.
They give us a sense of camaraderie.
They're also the prism through which we see and understand the world.
In their book, The Power of Us,
the psychologist Javan Bavill and Dominic Packer
explore how we can harness our group identities
to solve important challenges in our lives.
Jay, one of the themes that has surfaced repeatedly in this conversation is that our group
identities change the way we see the world.
Now, most of the time, the forces that create group identities are random or accidental,
but understanding how group identities are created can give us clues to how
to reinvent those identities to change the outcomes we'd like to see in the world.
I'd like to start with a personal story.
You were in grad school, you were assigned an office mate, Dominic Packer, he would of
course go on to become your collaborator and your co-author on this book, but you had
something of a rocky start when you first met, and it had to do with some
smelly gym clothes that you brought to your shared office.
And I was a big hockey player,
and I picked a desk in the sub-basement of our building
in the same room as Dominic, who had been there for a year.
And I had such a small apartment that I had no room
for my hockey equipment.
So I brought it in and I said,
I'm just gonna store this here.
And this basically chilled our relationship.
For the next several months, Dominic barely turned around
to talk to me.
He was pretty burned about the idea of me
storing my stinky hockey equipment in our shared office.
So tell me the story of how the bond between the two of you
got established.
I understand a cube of cheese was involved.
Yeah, so one of the rituals of being a graduate student at most universities is they bring
in guest speakers.
As a grad student, you're at the bottom of the pecking order, but you get to meet the
speakers, take them for lunch, and then they often have a nice wine and cheese reception.
And so at the wine and cheese reception, I was a poor student, I was eating as much cheese
as I could, drinking as much free beer as I could.
And I wasn't paying attention to what I was eating.
And I dropped this cheese cube.
It was about the size of a dice into my throat.
And it got plugged in my throat.
And I started choking.
And I tried to rinse it down with some beer, but that just made the situation worse.
At that point, I had zero oxygen going to my brain.
And I thought back to the times I used to work in the oil field of Alberta, I had to watch
all these safety videos.
And the first thing I learned was that if you're choking, most people can save you as long
you don't leave the room.
But it's so embarrassing to choke that most people who die do so because they just want
to be alone and not have other people see them.
So I went to the bartender and I couldn't speak, but I kind of like made the universal choking signature.
And then I twisted into him with my back,
but he didn't really know what was going on
and didn't help me that much.
So I grabbed Omnick's hand and pulled him into the men's room
and he didn't know what was going on either at that point.
But I communicated to him that I need him
to do the Heimlich on me or I would die.
And he looked like white like he had seen a ghost.
But eventually he got in the position
I kind of like sort of moving his hands
towards my diaphragm and he gave me the Heimlich,
it came out.
And I remember at the end of this,
there was professors coming in to use the washroom
and out and they're looking at us
like what are you guys doing in here?
But it bonded us together.
This weird near death experience,
almost me almost dying at the wine and cheese
and him having to save my life created a bridge. us together. This weird, near-death experience, almost me almost dying at the line in cheese,
and him having to save my life created a bridge, and from that point on, we became close friends,
and then we became collaborators, and now we're still working together.
It's a remarkable story, and I'm glad that both you and he had the presence of mine to sort
of solve the problem. But talk about this idea a little more, Jay.
Stressful situations and dramatic situations
have a capacity to bond people together.
I'm reminded of those studies involving dating couples.
And when the couples are having a date on a rickety bridge
where they feel like their lives might be in danger,
they feel more drawn to one another.
They feel like they have a bigger bond
than if they're having a very safe date.
And there have been stories about airplane hijackings where passengers feel like they're
thrown in together in the same kind of situations.
This cauldron, if you will, and out of that cauldron comes sort of this very intense bond.
One of the most interesting studies I've ever read was written by a woman in the 70s who
was part of a hijacking by a terrorist group.
She survived the ordeal and wrote this paper about what it was like
psychologically among the passengers as they were held hostage for several days in this hijacked plane in the middle of the desert and
What we learned by reading this and going through back to the story was that when you're all in this crisis together
It creates a sense of shared purpose and so what happened over the course of these days was it's first started creating like subgroups of people depending on what passport
They had and what their nationality was and eventually they all started to bond and you know rationed food and
Worked together to support one another and people who had small children and so it became a shared identity as people going through this crisis together.
And this is often what crises can do if we handle them well,
that it allows humans to form a sense of solidarity with complete strangers.
I want to look at one last example of how a behavior can be modified when a group identities
change.
When Muhammad Salah or Mosulah as he is known, joined the Liverpool Football Club in Britain.
He often celebrated goals by dropping to the pitch and touching his forehead to the
grass.
Mosulim and this was his way of giving thanks.
Now Liverpool fans have the same anti-Muslim bias as seen in many western countries, but
here is how they reacted as more scored goals. And then I'll be Muslim, sir. It's a golden of for you. It's golden of for me.
And say it in a mosque, that's where I want to be.
I'll start.
La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la.
Jay, what are you here when you hear these fans singing about wanting to become Muslims themselves?
This is a really powerful demonstration of the way that we rethink our identities when
someone is part of us. And so even though there's a lot of anti-Muslim attitudes
in the UK, having a representative
of this religious group on your team,
and especially real superstar,
made them feel a connection to him.
And in this case, it sounds like even their religion.
And so there was this great study by Salma Musa
and her colleagues, and
they found that among these Liverpool fans, they observed that hate crimes in that area
dropped by 16 percent, and that even public expressions on Twitter, so anti-Muslim tweets,
dropped by nearly half among Liverpool fans compared to fans from other groups. And so
this was a really powerful way of changing the norms of a group to be more inclusive and tolerant and embracing of people who are normally considered outsiders.
Now, of course, Liverpool didn't recruit Moasala because he was a Muslim.
They were doing it because he's a great athlete who was going to score a lot of goals for them.
But most of fact, on the attitudes of Liverpool fans raises the question of whether we can
deliberately create group
identities that override prejudice and tribalism.
You just cited the researcher, Salma Musa, who's tested this idea, I understand, by trying
to get Christians and Muslims to play on the same soccer teams in Northern Iraq.
Can you tell me about this idea of the soccer cure?
Yeah, she did this amazing study,
really mind-blowing in how she pulled it off.
She did this study in Northern Iraq
and it was at a period of time where ISIS
had caused chaos.
People had reinforced to flee their homes
and live in refugee camps
and eventually they were liberated in 2016.
And she went into these neighborhoods
and created a summer soccer league.
And she got a sample of Muslims and Christians,
and she had them play on these summer soccer teams.
And they generated a sense of connection
with people from these other religions
who were on their teams,
even though they didn't want to play
with people from other religions, having them on their team
increased their connection with them
and she measured all of these positive outcomes
as a consequence of this.
And it's hard to imagine a more divisive situation
to walk into other than religious differences
after a period of religious terrorism
and people being forced to go to refugee camps.
But what this showed is that being part of the same team working towards a common shared
goal, and especially I think what she found was also that teams that won, what were successful
at doing this, had even tighter bonds.
That shows how sports and just any type of connection we can build with people working
towards common purpose, can bridge gaps that we might have thought were completely unbridgeable. Now, I suppose you could say that people cheering a soccer star or people cheering fellow
members of the team, that's a cheap form of group identity.
It's not as real as religion or something that is in much more long-standing.
But in a way, all of our group loyalties are probably shaped by similar forces, small accidental events that over time become the pillars of our lives.
Yes.
When we think of identities, it's probably best to just start small,
find any common ground you can with somebody, and then you need to build on that,
by having them work together or something bigger, and maybe competing against other groups
in a way that's not harmful or dangerous, or at least having a common sense of purpose. by having them work together for something bigger. And maybe competing against other groups
in a way that's not harmful or dangerous,
or at least having a common sense of purpose.
If you wanna see the most racially harmonious
environments in our society,
they're often professional sports teams
that are completely racially integrated
and work together as brothers or sisters
towards achieving common goals together.
Yeah, and I've seen this at sports games as well.
When your team wins, people are not paying attention at this point. You know, am I hugging somebody who's black,
or am I hugging someone who's white, or someone who's older, or from a different religion? The
group identity to the team now supersedes all of those other previous group identities.
Yeah, this is one of the most important things for people to know. You can create division
between groups, but those same groups who are at each other's throats,
if you create a support and a goal
that they're working towards something together,
whether it's in sports or at work,
that can pull people together and get people committed
and making sacrifices and building friendships
among all members of their group
in a way that can overcome those animosities.
And so this seems to be something deep about human nature,
it's not just that we form groups in conflict,
but that we can form even broader groups that are more inclusive.
We talked earlier in the conversation, Jay,
about some of the conflicts that police were having
with civilian communities,
especially when it came to concerns about racial profiling.
There have been studies sort of looking at how diversifying the police force in some ways
can have the effect of reducing some of these biases.
Can you talk about some of that work, the idea that in some ways
by reshaping the groups, your reshaping group identities,
and you're also then reshaping perception and behavior?
Yes, so there's fascinating research in Chicago where they've tried to understand
what you can do to improve policing. And one of the most impressive studies on this was
a massive large scale study. They found that increasingly diversity of police officers
made a significant difference in police behavior. And so black and Hispanic officers in particular
made fewer stops and arrests and used force far less often than white officers.
And this was especially true when they interacted with black civilians.
And so this is one of the reasons why representation, having a diverse group of people who are
in charge of whether it's policing or her running other organizations, is incredibly
essential.
So many Americans, I think, remember the days after the 9-11 attacks when obviously the
country was going through a very somber period, but one of the things that happened is that
many of the partisan divisions in the country melted away for a few weeks.
People thought of themselves as Americans first, not as Republicans or Democrats.
So I think that's another example of how, in some ways,
a crisis or some kind of a threat can cause people
to look beyond a narrow group identity to something larger.
What ideas would you have to essentially,
you know, from the science of group identity,
to overcome some of the partisan divisions we're seeing
in the United States, but also in many other countries?
Some really truly great leaders are capable
of rallying people around a common identity. And so this can happen in the United States, but also in many other countries. Some really truly great leaders are capable of rallying people around a common identity.
And so this can happen in the face of threat
from other countries, but can also happen
when you have a shared purpose about something
that's bigger than everybody.
And so this is part of the space race.
The exploration of space will go ahead
whether we join in it or not.
And it is one of the great adventures of all time.
And that was during the Cold War, but what Kennedy tried to do was get people around a common
visionary purpose. Can we put somebody on the moon? And that generated an enormous amount of
excitement. And so this is something that is often missing from the way that our politics normally
unfolds, which is really about partisan gain.
We really need to think about like,
what is gonna animate and excite and motivate people
to feel a common sense of purpose,
to make sacrifices and help on another,
move away from trolling one another online
or in other forms of media.
You know, you mentioned the space race a second ago.
The astronaut William Anders took a famous photograph
in 1968.
It's called Earthrise and it shows a delicate blue planet suspended in the vast blackness
of space.
Here's how William Anders described what it felt like to see the Earth over the horizon
of the moon.
Coming upon the lunar horizon, I was immediately almost overcome with this thought.
Here we came all this way to the moon, and yet the most significant thing we are seeing
is our own home planet, the Earth.
Jay, what do you think this astronaut's experience tells us about the potential we have to rethink
our group identities to overcome problems not just at the local level or the national level,
but global problems like the threat of climate change.
To address a problem like climate change, we need a level of international cooperation
we've never seen before.
And the experience of these astronauts suggests it's possible.
Many interviews with astronauts who've ever seen the Earth from above have this experience
of awe and connectedness with all of humanity, and many Earth, the crew of Apollo 8 has a message that we would like to send you.
At the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth.
The earth will move without force.
It's not feasible for us to get everybody up to the moon, but what it suggests is that if we can get people to see themselves as connected to all of humanity,
we might be able to change the way they think about themselves.
They suddenly see themselves as part of something bigger,
part of something bigger than their nation.
And it might be the trigger that we need
to motivate people to work towards common purpose,
to fight off the threats that are gonna affect all of us.
And the biggest one on the horizon,
the moment we're done with the pandemic,
the biggest threat is climate change.
It's going to be a tsunami. We're already seeing the effects of it.
And so it really does require a sense of common purpose among everyone,
among every country, because if we lose this earth, we don't have anywhere to go.
Psychologists, Javan, Bevel, and Dominic Packer are the authors of the power of us,
harnessing our shared identities
to improve performance, increase cooperation and promote social harmony. Jay, thank you so much
for joining me today on Hidden Brain. Thanks for having me. Good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, good night, Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
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