Mr.
Viwin Singh
Assistant
Professor
Department
of Electronics and Communication Engineering
Researchers find that
being in a group makes some people lose touch with their personal moral
beliefs. When people get together in groups, unusual things can happen -- both
good and bad. Groups create important social institutions that an individual
could not achieve alone, but there can be a darker side to such alliances:
Belonging to a group makes people more likely to harm others outside the group.
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When people get together in groups, unusual
things can happen -- both good and bad. Groups create important social
institutions that an individual could not achieve alone, but there can be a
darker side to such alliances: Belonging to a group makes people more likely to
harm others outside the group.
"Although humans’
exhibit strong preferences for equity and moral prohibitions against harm in
many contexts, people's priorities change when there is an 'us' and a
'them,'" says Rebecca Saxe, an associate professor of cognitive
neuroscience at MIT. "A group of people will often engage in actions that
are contrary to the private moral standards of each individual in that group,
sweeping otherwise decent individuals into 'mobs' that commit looting,
vandalism, even physical brutality."
Several factors play
into this transformation. When people are in a group, they feel more anonymous,
and less likely to be caught doing something wrong. They may also feel a diminished
sense of personal responsibility for collective actions.
Saxe and colleagues
recently studied a third factor that cognitive scientists believe may be
involved in this group dynamic: the hypothesis that when people are in groups,
they "lose touch" with their own morals and beliefs, and become more
likely to do things that they would normally believe are wrong.
In a study that
recently went online in the journal NeuroImage, the researchers
measured brain activity in a part of the brain involved in thinking about
oneself. They found that in some people, this activity was reduced when the
subjects participated in a competition as part of a group, compared with when
they competed as individuals. Those people were more likely to harm their
competitors than people who did not exhibit this decreased brain activity.
"This process
alone does not account for intergroup conflict: Groups also promote anonymity,
diminish personal responsibility, and encourage reframing harmful actions as
'necessary for the greater good.' Still, these results suggest that at least in
some cases, explicitly reflecting on one's own personal moral standards may
help to attenuate the influence of 'mob mentality,'" says Mina Cikara, a
former MIT postdoc and lead author of the NeuroImage paper.
Group dynamics
Cikara, who is now an
assistant professor at Carnegie Mellon University, started this research
project after experiencing the consequences of a "mob mentality":
During a visit to Yankee Stadium, her husband was ceaselessly heckled by Yankees
fans for wearing a Red Sox cap. "What I decided to do was take the hat
from him, thinking I would be a lesser target by virtue of the fact that I was
a woman," Cikara says. "I was so wrong. I have never been called
names like that in my entire life."
The harassment, which
continued throughout the trip back to Manhattan, provoked a strong reaction in
Cikara, who isn't even a Red Sox fan.
"It was a really
amazing experience because what I realized was I had gone from being an
individual to being seen as a member of 'Red Sox Nation.' And the way that
people responded to me, and the way I felt myself responding back, had changed,
by virtue of this visual cue -- the baseball hat," she says. "Once
you start feeling attacked on behalf of your group, however arbitrary, it
changes your psychology."
Cikara, then a
third-year graduate student at Princeton University, started to investigate the
neural mechanisms behind the group dynamics that produce bad behavior. In the
new study, done at MIT, Cikara, Saxe (who is also an associate member of MIT's
McGovern Institute for Brain Research), former Harvard University graduate
student Anna Jenkins, and former MIT lab manager Nicholas Dufour focused on a
part of the brain called the medial prefrontal cortex. When someone is
reflecting on himself or herself, this part of the brain lights up in
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) brain scans.
A couple of weeks
before the study participants came in for the experiment, the researchers
surveyed each of them about their social-media habits, as well as their moral
beliefs and behavior. This allowed the researchers to create individualized
statements for each subject that were true for that person -- for example,
"I have stolen food from shared refrigerators" or "I always
apologize after bumping into someone."
When the subjects
arrived at the lab, their brains were scanned as they played a game once on
their own and once as part of a team. The purpose of the game was to press a
button if they saw a statement related to social media, such as "I have
more than 600 Facebook friends."
The subjects also saw
their personalized moral statements mixed in with sentences about social media.
Brain scans revealed that when subjects were playing for themselves, the medial
prefrontal cortex lit up much more when they read moral statements about
themselves than statements about others, consistent with previous findings.
However, during the team competition, some people showed a much smaller
difference in medial prefrontal cortex activation when they saw the moral
statements about themselves compared to those about other people.
Those people also
turned out to be much more likely to harm members of the competing group during
a task performed after the game. Each subject was asked to select photos that
would appear with the published study, from a set of four photos apiece of two
teammates and two members of the opposing team. The subjects with suppressed
medial prefrontal cortex activity chose the least flattering photos of the
opposing team members, but not of their own teammates.
"This is a nice
way of using neuroimaging to try to get insight into something that
behaviorally has been really hard to explore," says David Rand, an
assistant professor of psychology at Yale University who was not involved in
the research. "It's been hard to get a direct handle on the extent to
which people within a group are tapping into their own understanding of things
versus the group's understanding."
Getting lost
The researchers also
found that after the game, people with reduced medial prefrontal cortex
activity had more difficulty remembering the moral statements they had heard
during the game.
"If you need to
encode something with regard to the self and that ability is somehow undermined
when you're competing with a group, then you should have poor memory associated
with that reduction in medial prefrontal cortex signal, and that's exactly what
we see," Cikara says.
Cikara hopes to follow
up on these findings to investigate what makes some people more likely to
become "lost" in a group than others. She is also interested in
studying whether people are slower to recognize themselves or pick themselves
out of a photo lineup after being absorbed in a group activity.
The research was
funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the Packard
Foundation.
Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Courtesy: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/06/140612104950.htm
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