Authors
Mina Cikara, Emile G Bruneau, Rebecca R Saxe
Publication date
2011/6
Journal
Current Directions in Psychological Science
Volume
20
Issue
3
Pages
149-153
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
People are often motivated to increase others' positive experiences and to alleviate others' suffering. These tendencies to care about and help one another form the foundation of human society. When the target is an outgroup member, however, people may have powerful motivations not to care about or help that “other.” In such cases, empathic responses are rare and fragile; it is easy to disrupt the chain from perception of suffering to motivation to alleviate the suffering to actual helping. We highlight recent interdisciplinary research demonstrating that outgroup members' suffering elicits dampened empathic responses as compared to ingroup members' suffering. We consider an alternative to empathy in the context of intergroup competition: schadenfreude—pleasure at others' pain. Finally, we review recent investigations of intergroup-conflict interventions that attempt to increase empathy for outgroups. We propose …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Cikara, EG Bruneau, RR Saxe - Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2011