Weng Helen Y, Fox Andrew S, Hessenthaler Heather C, Stodola Diane E, Davidson Richard J
Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.
Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the Waisman Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Dec 10;10(12):e0143794. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143794. eCollection 2015.
Compassion, the emotional response of caring for another who is suffering and that results in motivation to relieve suffering, is thought to be an emotional antecedent to altruistic behavior. However, it remains unclear whether compassion enhances altruistic behavior in a uniform way or is specific to sub-types of behavior such as altruistic helping of a victim or altruistic punishment of a transgressor. We investigated the relationship between compassion and subtypes of altruistic behavior using third-party paradigms where participants (1) witnessed an unfair economic exchange between a transgressor and a victim, and (2) had the opportunity to either spend personal funds to either economically (a) help the victim or (b) punish the transgressor. In Study 1, we examined whether individual differences in self-reported empathic concern (the emotional component of compassion) was associated with greater altruistic helping or punishment behavior in two independent samples. For participants who witnessed an unfair transaction, trait empathic concern was associated with greater helping of a victim and had no relationship to punishment. However, in those who decided to punish the transgressor, participants who reported greater empathic concern decided to punish less. In Study 2, we directly enhanced compassion using short-term online compassion meditation training to examine whether altruistic helping and punishment were increased after two weeks of training. Compared to an active reappraisal training control group, the compassion training group gave more to help the victim and did not differ in punishment of the transgressor. Together, these two studies suggest that compassion is related to greater altruistic helping of victims and is not associated with or may mitigate altruistic punishment of transgressors.
同情是对遭受痛苦的他人表示关心的情感反应,并会产生减轻痛苦的动机,它被认为是利他行为的情感前提。然而,目前尚不清楚同情是否以统一的方式增强利他行为,或者是否特定于某些行为亚型,例如对受害者的利他帮助或对违规者的利他惩罚。我们使用第三方范式研究了同情与利他行为亚型之间的关系,在该范式中,参与者(1)目睹了违规者与受害者之间不公平的经济交换,并且(2)有机会花费个人资金在经济上(a)帮助受害者或(b)惩罚违规者。在研究1中,我们在两个独立样本中检验了自我报告的共情关注(同情的情感成分)的个体差异是否与更多的利他帮助或惩罚行为相关。对于目睹不公平交易的参与者,特质共情关注与对受害者的更多帮助相关,与惩罚无关。然而,在那些决定惩罚违规者的人中,报告共情关注程度更高的参与者决定惩罚的程度更低。在研究2中,我们使用短期在线同情冥想训练直接增强同情,以检验经过两周训练后利他帮助和惩罚是否增加。与积极重新评估训练对照组相比,同情训练组给予更多帮助受害者的行为,在对违规者的惩罚方面没有差异。这两项研究共同表明,同情与对受害者更多的利他帮助相关,与对违规者的利他惩罚无关或可能减轻这种惩罚。