From: Karl Ardo on
Race and Empathy Matter on Neural Level
ScienceDaily (Apr. 27, 2010) --

Race matters on a neurological level when
it comes to empathy for African-Americans
in distress, according to a new
Northwestern University study.

In a rare neuroscience look at racial
minorities, the study shows that
African-Americans showed greater
empathy for African-Americans facing
adversity -- in this case for victims
of Hurricane Katrina -- than Caucasians
demonstrated for Caucasian-Americans
in pain.

"We found that everybody reported
empathy toward the Hurricane Katrina
victims," said Joan Y. Chiao, assistant
professor of psychology and author of
the study. "But African-Americans
additionally showed greater empathic
response to other African-Americans
in emotional pain."

The more African-Americans identified
as African-American the more likely
they were to show greater empathic
preference for African-Americans,
the study showed.

Initially, Chiao thought that both
African-Americans and Caucasian-Americans
would either show no pattern of in-group
bias or both show some sort of preference.

The take-home point to Chiao: our
ability to identify with another
person dramatically changes how
much we can feel the pain of another
and how much we're willing to help them.

"It's just that feeling of that person is
like me, or that person is similar to me,"
she said. "That experience can really lead
to what we're calling 'extraordinary empathy
and altruistic motivation.' It's empathy
and altruistic motivation above and beyond
what you would do for another human."

Using functional magnetic resonance imaging,
the study included an equal number of
African-American and Caucasian-American
study participants. They were shown pictures
depicting either African-American or
Caucasian-American individuals in a
painful (i.e. in the midst of a natural
disaster) or neutral (attending an
outdoor picnic).

"We think this is really interesting
because it suggests mechanisms by which
we can enhance our empathy and altruistic
motivation simply by finding ways in
which we have commonality across
individuals and across groups,"
Chiao said.

Chiao, who works at one of only two
labs in the world dedicated to cultural
and social neuroscience, is particularly
interested in how social identities
related to gender or race modulate the
biological process underlying feeling
and reason. (The Web address for the
Social and Cultural Neuroscience Lab
at Northwestern is
http://culturalneuro.psych.northwestern.edu/Lab_Website/Welcome.html
From: V on
On Wed, 14 Jul 2010 18:34:40 -0700 (PDT), Karl Ardo
<demohassan(a)yahoo.com.mx> wrote:

> Race matters on a neurological level when
>it comes to empathy for African-Americans
>in distress, according to a new
>Northwestern University study. <snip>

Old news. The Russians discovered this about 50 years ago.

It doesn't only apply to Afro-Americans. The Russians discovered that
there was a strong psychic link among ethnic Russians.