Hidden Brain - You 2.0: Empathy Gym
Episode Date: September 1, 2020Some people are good at putting themselves in another person's shoes. Others may struggle to relate. But psychologist Jamil Zaki argues that empathy isn't a fixed trait. This week, in our final instal...lment of You 2.0, we revisit a favorite episode about how to exercise our empathy muscles.
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This is Hidden Brain from NPR. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In May 2007, an artist living in Chicago moved into a new place.
It was a small room with white walls. The interior design was minimalist.
There was a bed, a desk, a computer, a lamp, and a paintball gun.
A fix to the gun was a webcam.
It live streamed the room to the internet.
Anyone could look in and anyone could take control of the gun, aim and fire.
At all hours of the day and night, the paintball gun would spring to life
and begin shooting yellow pellets into the room.
Some hit the walls or the furniture. Some hit the artist.
I was shot at 70,000 times and I received 80 million hits on the internet from 128 countries. Wafa Bilal spent one whole month in the room, targeted tens of thousands of times by random
strangers around the world.
Why would he choose to do this?
Wafa was born and raised in Iraq.
He came to the US in the early 90s.
I live this duality of living in two places. One is a comfort zone of United States, and the other one is the brothers was killed in an airstrike.
One of my brother, Haji, was killed in air to ground missile.
And I didn't know what to do.
Wafa is a performance artist, and he wanted to engage others in the conversation that was
running through his mind.
Three years after his brother's death, he got an idea.
In January of 2007, I was watching TV and I was watching an interview with an American soldier.
Sitting in the United States, the soldier directed drones to fire missiles thousands of miles away in the Iraqi desert. I was shocked how the soldier completely disconnected physically and emotionally from what happened
on the ground of Iraq.
At the time, Wafa was living in Chicago.
He came up with a proposal and presented it to a gallery.
I said, I want to lock myself in the gallery space for 30 days and I
get a built a robot connected to the internet and the robot shoots a
pinball and viewers online could direct that gun and shoot it. I'm there you go that's another shot let's see this one from I says from
Milwaukee. The idea was to turn ordinary people into drone operators who could
target someone far away except in this case people would not be following
orders. They would have a choice about whether to shoot and you could see the
human being on the other end. Wafa's suffering would be visible.
When you are in this little room you see the sheer destruction but if you are online it
becomes like a video game and that another thing that I wanted to connect with people, that
there is real consequences to these actions.
As the days went by, Wafas started to feel weak by the day. I thought I felt better. As the days went by, Wafa started to feel crushed by the experience.
It's late at night.
Feel extremely tired.
But I'm afraid she goes to bed.
In some ways, Wafa was attempting to do
what civil disobedience movements around the world have done.
He was deliberately putting himself in harm's way
in order to draw attention to a problem and affect change.
I have United States, I have Denmark, I have Ireland,
I have the UK, I have United States, I have Denmark, I have Ireland, I have the UK, I have France,
I canada, so it's not one place, it is almost a global shooting and I don't know.
Somebody said imagine the damn nation will like this. Why did strangers who knew nothing about Wafa take it upon themselves to hurt him?
Do technology in modern life and the anonymity they offer make us less caring as human beings?
On today's show, Building Empathy in a Connected and Confrontational World.
This week on Hidden Brain, think deeply.
We kick off our annual Summer Series, YouTube.O.
Authenticity is contagious.
I have been dragged into this all the way kicking and screaming.
Ideas and advice about how you can respond to life's chaos.
Just do it, just check to my inbox. Just check, just check, just check to my phone real quick.
With wisdom.
We begin the series with an exploration of the power and the cost of empathy.
By putting ourselves into the story of people who on the surface appeared different from us.
We can recognize our common humanity with them and that can trigger empathy in a really natural way.
Jamil Zaki is a psychologist at Stanford University.
He's the author of the book, The War for Kindness, Building Empathy in a Fractured World.
Jamil, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me.
You have a very powerful story about how you came to be interested in the subject of empathy.
Tell me about your parents, where they are from, how they met, what they went through, and what you learned from the experience.
So it turns out that in the early 1970s, Washington State University in Pullman had a program
where they granted full scholarships for graduate studies to students from the world's
poorest nations.
My mother received the scholarship from Peru, and my father did not receive a scholarship,
but nonetheless came to Washington State from Pakistan.
So they traveled from Lima and Lahore, these two massive cities to the sleepy town of
Pullman where they fell in love.
When I think about my parents, I think the biggest thing that they had in common was their
sense of foreignness in the US.
They sort of took comfort in each other in a place that neither of them understood, but
as they grew more comfortable with the US and were acclimated to it, they grew less
comfortable with each other.
And they divorced.
They started splitting up when I was eight, but didn't finish until I was 12.
And theirs was a long and acrimonious split and I am their only child.
And so a lot of my childhood was spent kind of bouncing around between their houses and it really felt like I was bouncing between parallel universes
because their priorities and values and fears are really as far apart as their hometowns.
So I would often feel confused, you know,
as a small child, I would try to,
when I was with my mom, figure out the rules
that governed her heart and mind
and make them true for myself.
But then when I would go to my dad's house,
those same rules would stop working.
And it was just very confusing,
and it felt, I think, to all three of us, like I would really have to choose one of my parents and give up on really knowing the other.
But I knew that I had to try for all of our sake. So I did and I kind of kept working at it and eventually got better and learned to tune myself to my parents' different frequencies. And that kind of saved me as a kid. I think empathy saved me.
Not because it's easy, it was work. I was thinking of my parents' divorce as an empathy
gym for me that forced me to work out my ability to care about and understand other people.
And you, as you said, described this as an empathy gym, were there times when you failed to show them empathy?
I mean, I must imagine that as a small child, it must have been very difficult in many
ways to comprehend what was happening and why these two adults were fighting over you
and each was demanding that you see things from their point of view.
Oh, absolutely. I mean, one of the big realizations for me as a kid
was realizing that both of them were in pain.
I think as a child, it's very easy to focus on your own
perspective and what you're going through.
And to blame others, especially adults,
I think when I realized that my parents were both struggling just like I was,
it actually made me feel kinship towards them and made it easier to understand that I could
connect with both of them. In fact, because what we were going through wasn't that different.
Talk a little bit about the benefits of empathy. There's been a lot of work that looks
at what happens when people receive empathy from their partners, for example, or from their
doctors.
Oh, yeah. I mean, in many cases, empathy benefits all parties involved. So, for instance,
patients of empathic doctors are more satisfied with their care, but are also more likely to follow
doctors' recommendations, which is important for things like preventative care, and spouses of
empathic partners are happier in their marriages. But one thing that I think people don't realize
as much is that people who experience empathy for others also benefit. It's not just receiving it, but giving it helps us too.
So people who are relatively high in empathy,
for instance, are less likely to become depressed,
feeling empathy for others reduces our stress
and adolescence who are able to pick out
other people's emotions accurately
are better adjusted during middle school.
Now, parents everywhere recognize the value of empathy.
We have courses and classes that try and teach children empathy.
I came by this clip on Sesame Street featuring the actor Mark Ruffalo and the character,
Marie, take a listen to the clip.
Marie.
What?
Did I tell you about that time when I lost my favorite teddy bear?
Oh no. It was... This is very sad. Did you about that time when I lost my favorite teddy bear.
Oh no. It was...
This is very sad.
Did you love that teddy bear?
I love that teddy bear.
Oh, I can imagine exactly how it feels.
It's really sad feeling.
It makes me want to cry like this.
It was sad.
It was so sad. But you know what? What? You know what empathy is. I do.
That was empathy. What? You could understand how I was feeling, exactly how I was feeling
and understood it. That's empathy. I said now.
Jamil, you've used a similar kind of scenario to explain empathy. Someone's talking with a friend, the friend gets a phone call, walk me through the rest
of that scenario and the three components that you've identified that make up empathy.
Yeah, so again, imagine that you're sitting with a friend having lunch and they receive
a phone call and whatever the person on the other side of the line says makes them visibly
upset.
You don't know what's wrong, but your friend starts to cry and it's obvious that something is wrong. Well, as you see this,
a bunch of things might happen inside you. First, you might become upset yourself, sort of vicariously
catching their feeling. That's what psychologists often call emotional empathy. You might also try to
figure out what's wrong, what they're feeling, and why. That's what we call cognitive empathy. You might also try to figure out what's wrong, what they're feeling, and why. That's what we call
cognitive empathy. And if you're a good friend at least, you probably will feel concerned for what
they're going through and a desire for their well-being to improve. That's what psychologists call
empathic concern or compassion. And even though these pieces of empathy sometimes go together, they also
split apart in interesting ways. So for instance, different brain systems support emotional
and cognitive empathy and empathic concern. And different groups of people struggle with
different flavors of empathy. People with autism spectrum disorders, for instance, struggle
sometimes to understand others, their
cognitive empathy, but don't struggle as much to share other people's emotions or care
about what other people feel.
Individuals with psychopathy have the opposite profile.
They're often perfectly able to understand what other people feel, but they don't share
those emotions.
That's fascinating.
It's almost like these are different muscle groups
and you need all the muscle groups to be functioning to in some ways actualize your full capacity
for empathy. I love that analogy. Yeah, that's a perfect way of putting it. So at the same time that
parents and books and motivational speakers and fate traditions cite the value of empathy,
there is also some evidence that empathy might be changing over time and not necessarily
in a good way.
U-Site research that compares the average level of empathy in 2009 to the average in 1979.
Yeah, so this is work by Sarah Conrath and her colleagues using the most sort of famous
and well-known scale to
measure empathy, which is just a questionnaire.
In this questionnaire, people see a number of statements and they're asked how much they
agree with that statement, from one, not at all, to five, extremely.
So a sample statement might be, I often have tender, concerned feelings for people less
fortunate than myself.
Or I try to look at
everyone's side of a disagreement before I make a decision. So a series of
questions like that give you a sort of empathy score, again from one to five.
People have taken this questionnaire over several decades, and if you compare
their scores over time, they've been dwindling or eroding. And what's more
troubling is that a lot of this decline
happened pretty recently sort of since the turn of the 21st century.
Let's talk about some of the reasons this might be happening. You offer various theories
in the book. Among people 18 to 34 for example, ten times as many people live alone today as did in
1950. You say that more than half of all residents in
Paris and Stockholm live alone in some parts of Manhattan and Los Angeles, that number
tops 90%. Is there a link between going solo and the amount of empathy we feel for others?
It's hard to say, you know, and I do want to be clear that in looking at any demographic
trends over time and trying to link them to empathy decline,
we're necessarily speculating, right? There's no way to run an experiment where you have history
occur multiple times and fiddle with different pieces of it to see what causes a decline in empathy.
But certainly, you know, you can point to big shifts in the way that people live, and one of them is
that we're becoming more urban and more solitary.
And when we interact with people, it's often in more transactional ways, right?
Sort of some of the regular rituals that used to bring us into contact with other people
often are giving way to more solitary pursuits. So there's some evidence, for instance,
that anonymous interactions do not favor empathy.
So I don't know, there's not data specifically
on solitary living, but to the extent that living in a giant city
but by yourself, where most of the people who you see
are total strangers, there's some evidence
that suggests that perhaps that might have an effect on our empathy.
And of course, one of the other places
where anonymity rules is the internet.
And when you look at some of the changes that have unfolded
and the timetable of those changes,
they do coincide at least,
correlationally with the rise of internet technologies.
And I'm wondering, is there reason to imagine that there's a connection between these two things,
that the connections we have with one another online
and on Twitter or social media,
where we often don't know who we are communicating
where they're who's listening or who's not listening?
Could this in some ways be behind this decline in empathy?
It certainly is possible.
I think that the internet and social media, I don't think of them as inherently anti-social.
In a way, you can think of the internet as humanity's greatest, empathic opportunity
ever.
We have the chance to connect with people around the world at any time on their own terms
and respond with compassion.
I mean, I think if you go back and read Wired, you know, 10 or 15 years ago, people were
waxing poetic about the way that the internet could bring us all together into a global community.
I think in some obvious ways that hasn't always occurred, and I think that has to do in
part with some of the ways that we tend to use the internet that might not be empathy-positive.
So for instance, oftentimes online, we don't have a chance to see each other's faces and
voices in real-time interactions, the kind of richness that we have when we hang out offline.
Instead we see avatars and strings of text, and those might not be great triggers
for empathy. There's a great study by Juliana Schroder and her colleagues where they had
people describe their political opinions, sort of, in an audio recording. They then had
a separate group of people listen to those audio recordings or read a transcript of them.
And what they found was that people were more likely to dehumanize the person whose opinion
was they were reading about if they were only reading it.
Whereas if they were hearing the person's voice, they were less likely to dehumanize that
individual.
So it's almost as though we're leaving behind when we go online some of the cues that allow us to detect each other's
real humanity
And there's a deep irony there isn't that Jimmy
I mean when we live in these big cities we're living cheek by jowl with lots of other people
But in some ways we're not connecting with them and the same goes with the internet when we have the capacity
To connect with large numbers about the people,
but we're connecting in often the superficial way
instead of this deeper way.
It is ironic, isn't it?
I mean, in cities, for instance,
we see more people than we ever did in human history,
but we know fewer of them.
And it almost is as though our interactions
sort of favor a dehumanized perspective on each other.
I mean, I know what a sort of stuck-in traffic
or trying to make my way down a crowded block in Manhattan.
People become not people, but obstacles for me on my way.
And I think that that's sort of the way
that it can often feel in modern contexts.
When we come back, more on the signs of empathy and why being empathetic can sometimes be bad for you.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Jameel Zaki is the author of the War of a Kindness, building empathy in a fractured
world.
He conducts research on empathy at Stanford University.
Jermia people who have been through terrible suffering can respond in different ways.
Some people turn inward to avoid future pain while others turn outward.
They show empathy for the suffering of other people.
I feel like I've seen research studies that show both these things.
Can you talk about these studies and why people might go in one direction or
another after the experience trauma? Yeah, you know, I think that we often think of
trauma, you know, sort of things like being through a war or being assaulted or
suffering a terrible injury as things that, again, as you put it nicely
sort of draw us into each other, or even that trauma might perpetuate itself.
We often hear about cycles of violence or the idea that hurt people, hurt people.
And that's certainly true in some cases, but there is a lot of research that's actually
much more hopeful on what psychologists call
altruism-born of suffering.
This is the idea that sometimes when we've gone through great pain, that actually sort
of opens us up to caring more about other people and their suffering.
So there are all sorts of examples of that as well.
So for instance, people who have suffered from addiction often change their lives and become
addiction counselors. People who have been assaulted often change their lives and become assault
counselors, sort of because they resonate with the frequency of other people suffering more acutely.
Psychologists don't really know that much about what causes people when they experience suffering
to go in one direction or another, but one important factor that they have identified
is the support that we receive from other people.
So if after a trauma, an individual is able to find a community of others who support
them, well then they're more likely to recover from their own trauma and they might also be more likely to turn around and provide that support to others. I'm
thinking about research that Michael Wall and Nile Bransk and others have done
looking at how when you remind people of past traumas you remind Americans for
example of the 9-11 attacks Americans become more willing to endorse or tolerate harsh interrogation techniques
in the fight against terrorism.
And in some ways at one level, this seems very intuitive that you feel like you've been
through something bad, and I remind you of the bad thing you've been through.
And there's a part of you that says, I don't want that bad thing to happen again, and
that increases my willingness to permit actions or behaviors that might
I might otherwise say hang on a second. This is going to cause harm to other people
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, I think that that it cuts both ways, right? I mean, I think reminding people of
collective trauma for instance can make them more weary of
trauma, for instance, can make them more weary of outsiders and sort of more, as you say, willing to even endorse violence or aggression towards outsiders.
But thinking of a common threat is also one way to bring people within a group closer
together.
I remember after 9-11, the way that Americans really felt like we were all won because we were facing this really deep trauma together.
And likewise, there's all sorts of evidence
that when people feel that they have a common threat
that they're facing, they band together.
So it's really interesting what you're really pointing out
is that empathy in some ways has this double-edged
sword quality to it, which is on the one hand it's
prompting us to be outward looking, but it's also driven in some ways by factors about who's in
our in-group and who's not in our in-group. The psychologist Paul Bloom who wrote the book
against empathy, the case for rational compassion, he argues that empathy tends to be parochial and
it tends to be biased, and that's why when we ask people to be empathic,
we're really inviting them to be prejudiced.
Is that true?
I think that Paul is right in certain ways.
Absolutely empathy sort of begins parochially.
Our instinctive empathy might be more driven
towards people in our tribe than outside of it.
I often think of oxytocin, this chemical
that sort of causes us to bond to other people.
We often think of oxytocin as the love drug
or the cuddle hormone, but it turns out
that if you give people oxytocin intranasally, for instance,
they become more caring about people in their group, but less caring about
people outside their group. In essence, sort of turning up, people's empathy, in that case,
means turning up their parochialism. I think a big place where Paul and I differ is on
what we do with this information. So Paul, I think, believes that, okay, empathy tends
to be parochial and biased towards insiders
versus outsiders, so we should give up on it altogether.
I think differently.
I think that that's a problem with how empathy tends to operate, but I try to focus us
on the fact that we can control how we empathize and make choices about the way that we deploy
our caring. And if we
recognize that hey I'm empathizing in a parochial way in a tribal way, we can
try to make a different choice and broaden our empathy even towards people who
are different for ourselves.
You've done some very interesting work with police officers where you brought
to bear this insight that you just talked about.
Tell me about that work and tell me about how sometimes the right recommendation might actually be to tell people
behave a little less empathetically.
Yeah, so for the book I profiled
Washington State's Criminal Justice Training Center.
Although these officers were very empathic towards
citizens, they were even more empathic towards fellow police officers, and that included fellow
police officers who had engaged in potential police misconduct, right? So while I was there,
there was a case of police officers who had shot an unarmed man named Antonio Zambrano Montez.
police officers who had shot an unarmed man named Antonio Zambrano Montez. And during my visit to CJTC, the officers involved in that shooting.
They're not indicted at all.
So that seemed like a travesty of justice to many people in Washington State.
But the people at CJTC were adamant that these were good guys who had just made a mistake.
That level of empathy for people in their own group, I feel, and this is just my perspective,
might have interfered with their ability to understand how the rest of the world saw
what had happened.
And, in fact, this is consistent with research by my friend Emil Bruno.
He's studied sort of parochial empathy
in a lot of different intergroup contexts.
And what he finds is that sometimes
if you want to predict when someone will be willing to
be aggressive towards outsiders
or unwilling to compromise with someone
on the other side of a conflict,
it's not enough to measure whether they empathize
with the people on the outside.
You have to also measure how empathic they are
to their own group.
And it turns out that people who are extraordinarily empathic
towards people in their group,
even if they're also empathic towards outsiders,
are unwilling to compromise, unwilling to do anything
that could threaten their own tribe.
So what this suggests is that sometimes if we want to open ourselves up to other cultures, to people on the other side of a political or racial divide, maybe what we should start
out doing is not just trying to get to know them and empathize more with them, but to recognize
if we're empathizing so much with our group that will
be unable to be flexible emotionally.
I want to talk about another paradox of empathy.
You see that about 50% of oncologists report feeling intense heartbreak when they communicate
bad news to patients.
So even as empathy is a very powerful driver of positive outcomes
in medical settings, for example, it also seems to come at some personal cost.
Yeah, in fact, even having medical students simulate delivering bad news makes them anxious,
makes their palms start to sweat and their heart start to race. Empathy is usually beneficial
including in medical contexts for the people who receive
it. But it can be an occupational hazard for the people who give it.
I understand that a friend of yours is a psychotherapist and she avoids scheduling
depressed patients at the end of the day for in some ways the same reason.
Yeah, yeah, because she feels as though their negative mood will seep into her and
sort of leave her unable to interact well with her family. And I think this is part of the
double edged sword of empathy for people in caring professions. On the one hand, many of these
people are driven to their work by a preternatural care for others. But on the other hand, that same care can cause them to lose themselves, especially if
they're in really intense medical settings where they're surrounded by chronically surrounded
by other people's deep suffering.
And as a result, oftentimes I think people in caring professions feel like they're stuck
in a double bind between caring for other people adequately
but potentially grinding themselves down or turning themselves off.
This is something that is called in the medical profession, defensive dehumanization.
The idea that physicians and other healthcare professionals feel like they sometimes have to
turn off their empathy and stop seeing their patients as people just so they can go on being people.
You cite this interesting study that Mark Penser conducted in the 1970s, which is another
example of this kind of defensive behavior where people avoid situations where they might
be called upon to demonstrate empathy.
What was the study and what did he find? Yeah, this was a fascinating study where Panser placed a table asking for charitable
donations in the middle of a busy college student union. The table had a request for
donations to charity and sometimes it had a picture of a happy child on it and
other times it had a picture of a suffering child on it. Sometimes the table had no one manning it,
and sometimes the table had a person there who was in a wheelchair. And so the
sad child and the person in the wheelchair were what Pantser thought of as
empathic triggers, things that when people saw them they might feel sad. Maybe
they'd feel obligated to donate as well. And what he found is that when people saw them, they might feel sad. Maybe they'd feel obligated to donate as well.
And what he found is that when he put those empathic triggers on the table,
people actually walked further away.
They sort of went out of their way to avoid the table more.
It was almost as though they were trying to keep physical distance between them
and something that would make them feel empathy,
either because it would feel bad
or because it would force them to do something like donate
that maybe they didn't really want to do.
I think a lot of us have this experience
when we see, for instance, a homeless individual
on the sidewalk ahead of us.
I've heard of people who cross the street
to avoid that encounter,
maybe because they don't want to
sort of see that person suffering close up
because it will make them feel sad or guilty or both.
There's some irony there, isn't there, which is that the person who is likely to
actually be more empathic is also the person who's likely to cross the street
because they recognize that the empathy that they have inside them is going to
make them feel bad.
Absolutely.
Yeah, I've talked with lots of people who identify as empaths and basically say that
they're crippled by their overabundance of care for other people and that sometimes they avoid
sort of busy cities overall just because they don't want to be inundated with other people's pain.
So what happens at the level of individuals, also at some level manifests itself at the
level of groups and even the level of nations?
White Americans ask to read about the suffering of Native Americans, become more likely to
say that Native Americans are unable to feel complex emotions, such as hope and shame.
So in other words, empathy not only can produce
pain, pain can not only produce disengagement, but we can actually almost dehumanize other
people because we're so in some ways reluctant to accept the pain that comes with actually
empathizing with them.
Yeah, absolutely. Especially if you or a group that you belong to is responsible for that pain.
Because then empathy can twist into a sense of guilt or even self-loathing.
There are a lot of studies like this, and in one classic set of studies from the 1950s,
psychologists asked people to repeatedly shock, electrically, shock, another person.
And what they found was that when people had to shock someone else,
they ended up saying that they liked that person less,
almost as though they were defensively, again,
turning down their empathy for that individual.
And there's a dramatic example of this that was studied about 10 years ago
with death workers in the American South. These are executioners.
And what they found is that people
who worked on death rows were likely to dehumanize inmates and say that they had given up the right to be treated like people.
And this was especially true if they were the ones physically involved in delivering lethal injections and the like.
So again, in lots of ways, empathy can hurt us.
It can be unpleasant or causes to view ourselves
in ways that we don't like.
And that in turn can cause us to avoid it.
When we come back, how to manage this tricky balance?
And how we can train ourselves with deliberate
practice to be more empathetic.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
During his month-long performance art piece, tens of thousands of paintballs were fired at
Waffa Bilal in his studio.
The white walls of his gallery turned fluorescent yellow.
On day 11, a shoot-off from Estonia began bombarding his lamp until it fell apart.
It was sad for me because the lamp was just the only thing that stayed alive beside me in this space, especially at night.
And it was very sad.
Viewers online could see Wafas sadness.
Later that day, one of those viewers came to visit him in person. The lamp was totally broken and I have a person here
walked in with a brand new lamp.
Hi, my name is Matt, I was watching the camera this morning.
I saw the lamp went out.
So I had some time, I thought I'd run the target.
I got a new lamp and some light bulb.
So I know sometimes you need all the help you can get
in a situation like this.
So, I bring that by and I just help you out a little bit.
Jimmy, I'll talk about this moment.
Perfect strangers are attacking Waffa, and then a perfect stranger shows up to help him.
What do you think causes someone to take the step of saying, this problem is my problem.
This suffering is my problem. This suffering is my suffering.
Well, it's a beautiful story and there's so many like it. And I think it really, Wafa's story shows you the two sides
of how empathy can work in our modern context.
On the one hand, you've got people who are anonymous
sort of feeling as though they've had the breaklines
cut from their social lives
and they can do whatever they want without having to worry about the consequences.
So they're acting aggressively towards a total stranger.
On the other hand, you have someone who taps into that stranger's story, who's paying
attention to Waffa, he's watching the video of him and realizing what he's going through,
sort of able to tap into the story of this stranger,
and that instead of destroying his empathy,
builds it, stretches it towards this person,
and drives him, inspires him to help him.
I forgot to mention something is really important.
Matt is a Marine.
Matt wasn't the only visitor.
Hi, I'm Laura.
I live here in Chicago, so I came down to the gallery,
and I made some of my famous muffins.
That's actually my sister's recipe.
I know this the other night when you went to sleep,
they had one black sauté and one white sauté.
So I brought you some socks. There were lots of people online who had to offer to.
Sometimes they took control of the paintball gun by repeatedly pressing down a key and pointing the gun away from wafer.
He called them his virtual human shields. Something is really amazing ahead of me right now.
I have about 36 or so people pressing the button down on the left,
presenting people from panning into my direction.
Here is Wafo on day 31, after stepping outside the gallery building for the first time in a month.
And the whole idea is reinforced my belief in humanity and the human kindness.
So thank you very much for keeping the hope alive and please keep the conversation going.
It may seem surprising that Wafa's month in the paintball gallery left him feeling optimistic about humanity, but he's not alone in that optimism.
Jamil Zaki also thinks there are ways we might use technology to form connections with
people whom we previously did not see as being
like ourselves. He's done work looking at how virtual reality might help people identify with others
whose lives are very different from their own. What we wanted to do is use technology to bring people
not just to sort of observe the experiences of a homeless individual, but observe them
from the inside.
So we had a simulation where people went through a series of scenes.
These are sort of virtual reality scenes of what it might be like to become homeless.
So in one scene, they've been evicted from their apartment and they're trying to figure
out what they can sell to make ends meet and stay in their apartment just one more month.
In the second scene, they've failed to stay in their apartment and are now sort of sleeping in their car, which is then impounded. And then in a third scene, they're on a local bus line,
which in fact, in the Bay Area, there is a bus line that homeless individuals often take to for
shelter during the night. So again, this showed people in an interactive, immersive way, the process that an individual
might go through when they become homeless.
What we found was that this short simulation, powerfully affected people's empathy for
the homeless, even a month later, people who had gone through that simulation, as opposed
to a control condition, were less likely to dehumanize homeless individuals.
And they were more supportive of policies that would produce affordable housing
for people in the Bay Area, which is a very sort of hot button issue around here.
So again, this suggests that by putting ourselves into the story of people
who on the surface appear different from us. We can recognize as you
put it nicely our common humanity with them and that can trigger empathy in a really natural
way.
There are also some less high tech ways to get people to walk in the shoes of other people.
And one of the things you mentioned in the book is the idea of the theater.
How does being an actor in some ways prompt you to develop the muscle of empathy?
Yeah, I mean, if you think about what acting is that you really immerse yourself so deeply in the character
that you stop being yourself and start being them
For a little while I mean I'd say it's more than walking a mile in their shoes. You're almost walking a mile in their skin
and and as a result there's some evidence at least that acting in fact bolsters people's empathy
So in a great set of studies Taliah Goldstein looked at adolescents who
were in performing arts high schools and compared them, you know, at the beginning
and end of the year to students who were being trained in visual arts. And what
she found is that sort of acting, training and acting, improved kids' empathy
more than training in a different type of art, which is not to say that training in the visual arts doesn't have advantages, I'm sure it does, but
sort of embodying another person in the way that actors do, almost just like, I
would say a performance enhancing drug for empathy, if you will.
In some ways, there's the same goal for narrative fiction, I mean I feel like when I'm
reading a great novel, you know, I, as you say go for narrative fiction? I mean, I feel like when I'm reading a great novel,
I, as you say it a second ago, become transported.
I become a woman who's living in the 19th century.
And in some ways, deeply written, beautifully written
narrative fiction has this ability to pull us deep
into the lives of other people.
Absolutely.
Yeah, I mean, this is why I love fiction as well,
because it really allows us to effortlessly voyage
into the lives of other people
and not just see them again from the outside
but see them from the inside.
There's a fair amount of evidence now
that sort of the more fiction that people read,
the more empathic that they become.
So there's a number of correlational studies
that show, for instance, that children
who read lots of story books versus those who read less fiction become more empathic.
And that's holds for adults also. Unfortunately for me, reading nonfiction like scientific
articles, not that helpful.
The journal of personality and social psychology doesn't do it.
It's not really the empathy gym that some of us are looking for, but there's also some
experimental evidence now coming out that even small doses of fiction produce small but
reliable improvements in people's empathy.
And I think this is especially important because fiction is one of the most powerful ways
to connect with people who are different from us, who maybe
we might not have a chance to meet otherwise.
So for instance, you can maybe it would be hard to meet someone who is, I don't know, a
Bolivian minor, but you could probably go to a bookstore and find a novel about their
experiences.
And likewise, there's some evidence, for instance, that when people read
novelistic, vivid accounts of the experiences of Arab Americans or people of different
gender identities than themselves, they form greater empathy for those other groups.
We've talked in different ways about how redefining who's in the in-group can
reshape our capacity for empathy. You mentioned a very interesting research
study in the book involving fans of the Manchester United soccer team. Do you
remember that study and if you do can you tell me about it? Yeah I love this
study from Mark Levine and his colleague so they recruited rabid Manchester United fans.
And you know, fandom in UK soccer is very important.
And they asked them to write about
why they loved Manchester United so much.
And then told them that they would go to a different building
on campus to watch film of Manu playing.
While they were on their way across campus,
they came across a jogger who appeared to twist his ankle
and fall to the ground, writhing in pain.
This person was, in fact, an actor, and the trick here
was that the psychologist made it such that sometimes
that actor was wearing a Manchester United jersey.
Sometimes they were wearing a jersey of Liverpool,
which at the time was Manchester United's most hated rival,
and other times they were wearing a blank jersey.
And what they found was that man-u-fans
were more than willing to help fellow man-u-fans,
but also more than willing to basically step over
a Liverpool fan as they sort of writhed on the ground in pain. This is sort of classic tribalism in terms of
our empathy and generosity, but what I love about this study is that the
psychologist ran a second version of it. And here instead of asking man, you
fans to write about why they loved the team, they asked them to write about
why they loved soccer. Why it is such a beautiful game. And then they put them in the same scenario. What they found
was that after writing about how much they loved soccer, individuals were not just willing to
help fellow man u fans, but also willing to help liverpool fans. They still didn't help the
person in the blank jersey, which I guess suggests that it's better to be part of any tribe than part of none, but I think there's a deeper
takeaway from this study, which is that yes, it's easier to empathize with people who are
like us than unlike us. But all of us have many different selves inside us at any given moment,
All of us have many different selves inside us at any given moment, and each self carries with it a different group, maybe of a different size.
So if I think of myself, for instance, as a Stanford person, well then people at UC Berkeley
are my mortal enemies, especially during the big game.
But if I think of myself as a Californian, then my in-group, the people who deserve my
empathy and who it's easy to empathize with, that group grows. I think of myself as a Californian, than my in-group, the people who deserve my empathy,
and who it's easy to empathize with.
That group grows.
And if I can think of myself as, I don't know,
an American or a human being,
then that group will grow even further.
You know, I'm thinking about the story you told me
about your parents' divorce when you were a small child.
You write in the book about your parents that two people's experiences could differ so drastically, yet
both be true and deep, is maybe the most important lesson I've ever learned.
I think, you know, I often attribute that period of my life to really making me who I am
at the deepest level. I mean, I think not for nothing, they say that
research is me search, right, at least in psychology, people tend to gravitate towards ideas that
have made an impact on their life. And I think for me, empathizing with my parents was a survival
skill that I needed just to sort of keep my family together at some level. But it also taught me at a much broader level
that people can be fundamentally different from each other for fundamentally similar reasons.
My parents had totally different values, not because one of them was wrong or because one of them
was a bad person, but because of the lives that they had lived and the experiences that they had had
and the things that had hurt them and helped them along the way.
I think that this is a lesson that I try to impart to all of my students as well,
is that oftentimes when we encounter someone who's different for myself
and has an opinion or viewpoint, maybe that we even
abhor, it's easy to just view them as being either obtuse
or dishonest or both.
But that's a mistake.
It's something that psychologists call naive realism.
The idea that your version of the world is the world.
And I think that empathy at a deep level is the understanding
that someone else's world
is just as real as yours.
Jameel Zaki is the author of the War for Kindness, building empathy in a fractured world.
He conducts research on empathy at Stanford University.
Jameel, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me. This week's show was produced by Path Shah and edited by Tara Boyle and Jenny Schmidt.
Our team includes Raina Cohen, Laura Correll and Thomas Lue.
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