People show empathic responses to others’ pain, yet how they choose to apportion pain between themselves and others is not well understood. To address this question, we observed choices to reapportion social allocations of painful stimuli and, for comparison, also elicited equivalent choices with money. On average people sought to equalize allocations of both pain and money, in a manner which indicated that inequality carried an increasing marginal cost. Preferences for pain were more altruistic than for money, with several participants assigning more than half the pain to themselves. Our data indicate that, given concern for others, the fundamental principle of diminishing marginal utility motivates spreading costs across individuals. A mo...
Because of their shared neurobiological underpinnings, factors increasing physical pain can also inc...
The neural processes underlying empathy are a subject of intense interest within the social neurosci...
Studies indicate that physical and social pain may share some mechanisms and neural correlates. Noth...
People show empathic responses to others' pain, yet how they choose to apportion pain between themse...
BACKGROUND:Altruistic behavior is essential to the sustainability of society, but our current unders...
BackgroundAltruistic behavior is essential to the sustainability of society, but our current underst...
Concern for the suffering of others is central to moral decision making. How humans evaluate others'...
Concern for the suffering of others is central to moral decision making. How humans evaluate others’...
Social preferences like interpersonal altruism, fairness, reciprocity and inequity aversion are inhe...
A. Scatterplot of the individuals’ average amount of shared pain during the CONSTANT session and the...
Despite the growing interest on the effect of the social context on pain, whether and how different ...
Impatience can be formalized as a delay discount rate, describing how the subjective value of reward...
There has been a growing interest in the psychology of money (e.g., Rick, Cryder, & Loewenstein, 200...
Empathy has been proposed to be a proximate mechanism underlying altruistic behavior. However, both ...
The neural processes underlying empathy are a subject of intense interest within the social neurosci...
Because of their shared neurobiological underpinnings, factors increasing physical pain can also inc...
The neural processes underlying empathy are a subject of intense interest within the social neurosci...
Studies indicate that physical and social pain may share some mechanisms and neural correlates. Noth...
People show empathic responses to others' pain, yet how they choose to apportion pain between themse...
BACKGROUND:Altruistic behavior is essential to the sustainability of society, but our current unders...
BackgroundAltruistic behavior is essential to the sustainability of society, but our current underst...
Concern for the suffering of others is central to moral decision making. How humans evaluate others'...
Concern for the suffering of others is central to moral decision making. How humans evaluate others’...
Social preferences like interpersonal altruism, fairness, reciprocity and inequity aversion are inhe...
A. Scatterplot of the individuals’ average amount of shared pain during the CONSTANT session and the...
Despite the growing interest on the effect of the social context on pain, whether and how different ...
Impatience can be formalized as a delay discount rate, describing how the subjective value of reward...
There has been a growing interest in the psychology of money (e.g., Rick, Cryder, & Loewenstein, 200...
Empathy has been proposed to be a proximate mechanism underlying altruistic behavior. However, both ...
The neural processes underlying empathy are a subject of intense interest within the social neurosci...
Because of their shared neurobiological underpinnings, factors increasing physical pain can also inc...
The neural processes underlying empathy are a subject of intense interest within the social neurosci...
Studies indicate that physical and social pain may share some mechanisms and neural correlates. Noth...