Chapter 8 Notes in Socpsych
Chapter 8 Notes in Socpsych
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Chapter 8: Altruism
Helping comes in many forms, most strikingly in heroic, caring acts.
What is Altruism?
A motive to increase another’s welfare without conscious regard for one’s own self-
interests.
An altruistic person is concerned and helpful even when no benefits are offered or
expected in return.
We exchange not only material goods and money but also social goods: love, services,
information, status.
Social-exchange theory
The theory that human interactions are transactions that aim to maximize one’s
rewards and minimize one’s costs.
It does not contend that we consciously monitor costs and rewards, only that
such considerations predict our behavior.
Rewards
Men do not value a good deed unless it brings a reward.
Social Psychology 1
Internal Rewards
Men whose physiological responses and self-reports revealed the most arousal in
response to another’s distress also gave the most help to the person.
Guilt
the feel bad–do good effect occurs with people whose attention is on others,
people for whom prosocial behavior is, therefore, rewarding.
A positive mood is, in turn, conducive to positive thoughts and positive self-
esteem, which predispose us to positive behavior
Social Norms
Norms, the “ought” of our lives, are social expectations.
An expectation that people will help, not hurt, those who have
helped them.
Women offered help equally to males and females, whereas men offered
more help
when the strangers in need were females.
Social Psychology 2
Evolutionary Psychology
1. Kin selection: If you carry my genes, I’ll favour you.
3. Indirect reciprocity: I’ll scratch your back, you scratch someone’s, and someone will
scratch mine.
Genuine altruism
Loving parents suffer when their children suffer and rejoice over their children’s joys—
an empathy lacking in child abusers and other perpetrators of cruelty (Miller &
Eisenberg, 1988).
Social Psychology 3
💡 Empathy- The vicarious experience of someone else’s feeling; putting
yourself in someone else’s shoes.
Collapse of compassion
Empathic concern
Felt when we value another’s welfare, perceive the person as in need, and take
the person’s perspective.
Is it genuine altruism?
Helpful acts are either egoistic (done to gain rewards or avoid punishment) or subtly
egoistic (done to relieve inner distress)
Batson (2001), along with others, (Dovidio, 1991; Staub, 1991) believed that
sometimes people do focus on the welfare of others, not themselves.
Social psychologists Bibb Latané and John Darley (1970) were unconvinced. So
they staged ingenious emergencies and found that a single situational factor—the
presence of other bystanders—greatly decreased intervention.
Noticing
Interpreting
Illusion of Transparency
Social Psychology 4
Tendency to overestimate others’ ability to read our internal states.
Pluralistic Ignorance
Assuming responsibility
We are less likely to assume responsibility for taking action when we are in a
group than when we are alone.
Diffusion of responsibility
Time Pressures
People help others depending on their time availability.
A person not in a hurry may stop and offer help to a person in distress. People
seldom stopped to help if they were late.
Social Psychology 5
Even just sharing a birthday, a first name, or a fingerprint pattern leads people to
respond more to a request for help
Who helps?
Personality Traits
Modest relationships were found between helping and certain personality variables,
such as need for social approval.
Attitude and trait measures seldom predict a specific act, which is what
most experiments on prosocial behavior measure.
2. Researchers are gathering clues to the network of traits that predispose a person to
helpfulness.
Those high in self-monitoring are attuned to the expectations of others and are
especially helpful if they think helpfulness will be socially rewarded
Gender
FAST-OR-SLOW SINKING SHIPS
(1915) A German U-boat sank the (1912) The Titanic, carrying a similar mix
passenger liner Lusitania in a panicked of passengers, hit an iceberg and took
18 minutes, with women on board being nearly three hours to sink– and women
1 percent less likely to survive than men were 53 percent more likely to survive
than men.
Eagly (2009) also reported that among 6767 individuals who have received the
Carnegie medal for heroism in saving human lives, 90 percent have been men.
Faced with a friend’s problems, women respond with greater empathy and
spend more time helping
Social Psychology 6
How Can We Increase Helping?
One way to promote prosocial behavior is to reverse those factors that inhibit it.
We can increase helping by doing the following:
Eye contact
Personal Approach
Moral Inclusion
They include people who differ from themselves within the human circle to
which their moral values and rules of justice apply.
Moral Exclusion
If we see or read about someone helping, we are more likely to offer assistance.
Prosocial songs
Social Psychology 7
3. Learning by Doing
Over-justification effect
Unanticipated compliment
Experiments by Arthur Beaman and his colleagues (1978) revealed that once
people understand why the presence of bystanders inhibits helping, they
become more likely to help in group situations
Social Psychology 8