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AS Psychology The Core studies

AS Psychology The Core studies. The Social Approach. Pro-social (Altruistic) behaviour. Altruism has been defined as behaviour intended to help others having NO benefit to ourselves. Is ALTRUISM possible?. Freud & the ID? the ID operates on the pleasure principle!

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AS Psychology The Core studies

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  1. AS PsychologyThe Core studies The Social Approach

  2. Pro-social (Altruistic) behaviour • Altruism has been defined as behaviour intended to help others having NO benefit to ourselves

  3. Is ALTRUISM possible? • Freud & the ID? • the ID operates on the pleasure principle! • Can helping behaviour be motivated by our desire for pleasure?

  4. Is ALTRUISM possible? • The behaviourists & reinforcement? • All behaviour is reinforced (shaped) by pleasure? • Can we feel pleasure when we help others?

  5. Is ALTRUISM possible? • The Social Learning approach • We learn to be unselfish and to help others by watching others helping • (and by being rewarded when we copy)

  6. The GOOD SAMARITAN • The questions • Why do we sometimes help others? • When may we not help others? • What triggered psychological research?

  7. The Strange case of Kitty Genovese • Latane & Darley (1964) • 38 witnesses & no-one helped! • WHY the unresponsive bystander? • Diffusion of responsibility?

  8. Latane & Darley The 5 steps to helping behaviour • We must notice the event • We must interpret the event as an emergency • We must assume personal responsibility • We must choose a way to help • We must implement the decision • A negative response at any of these 5 stages means that the bystander will fail to intervene

  9. Step 1 - Noticing the event • If we do not NOTICE we will not help

  10. Step 2 - Defining the event as an emergency • In the sad case of Jamie Bulger many witnesses failed to intervene • They did not interpret the event as an emergency • Would you intervene in a lovers quarrel? • Not according to Shotland & Straw (1976)

  11. Step 3 - Assuming personal responsibility • If others are present you may assume THEY will help • This may lead to • Diffusion of Responsibility • Which may be why no one helped Kitty Genovese

  12. Step 4 - Choose a way to help • This involves making a decision and perhaps weighing up….. • Costs vs Benefits of helping

  13. Step 5 - Implement the decision • Am I competent to help? • Is there anyone else around who may be more competent? • Might I do more harm than good?

  14. The problem with this model • It explains ……. • Why people DO NOT HELP • NOT WHEN & WHY THEY DO

  15. Pause for thought … • When do we help others • When are we less likely to help others? • (helping situations)

  16. When DO people HELP and WHY • Piliavin Rodin & Pilavin (1968) • (A Field Experiment) • Good Samaritanism on the New York Subway • tested ….

  17. The cost / benefit theory • That when confronted with an ‘emergency’ • We balance • The possible costs against the possible benefits

  18. The possible costs of helping • The effort (may be physically demanding) • The time required (we may be late for work) • The loss of resources (damage to clothes) • The risk of harm (we may get injured) • Negative emotional response (we may feel sick)

  19. The possible costs for NOT HELPING • We may feel ashamed (I should have helped) • Something bad will ‘be our fault’ (The victim may die)

  20. The possible rewards for helping • Social approval (thanks from victim) • Self- esteem (feeling good about oneself) • Positive emotional response (feelings of elation and gladness)

  21. The result of our ‘analysis’ • If the rewards for helping outweigh the costs of not helping ….. we are likely to act in a pro-social manner (help)

  22. The study ………. • Piliavin Rodin & Piliavin • A Field Experiment • Good Samaritanism on the New York Subway

  23. The Field Experiment ….. • The method (Field Experiment) • The location • The New York Subway (underground train)

  24. The Field experiment ….. • When and where? • (103 ‘experimental trials’ took place) • Between 11.00am and 3.00pm over a period of two months in 1968 • On trains between 59th & 125th street • No stops, journey time 8 minutes

  25. The field experiment…... • The participants ? • Estimated as 4450 travellers on the trains • 45% black and 55% white • Average number in a carriage was 43 • Average no in ‘the critical area’ was 8.5

  26. The field experiment ……. • What was done by whom ? • Teams of 4 student experimenters(two male / two female) • Male actors (victim and model) • Females were observers

  27. The field experiment ……. • What did they do? • 70 seconds after train left station the • VICTIM pretended to collapse…. • Waited for ‘help’ …. • If no-one ‘helped’ the ‘model’ helped the VICTIM off at the next stop

  28. The field experiment ……. Experiment Carriage layout

  29. The field experiment …... • This was an experiment • What were the IVs (independent variables)

  30. The field experiment ……. The experimental conditions • IV Victims were either black or white and aged 26 - 35 • IV Victims carried bottle & smelled of alcohol (drunk condition) • or Carried a cane (lame condition) • The models were all white aged 24 - 29

  31. The field experiment …... • The observers recorded the race, age, sex, and location of ‘helper’ passengers • Who helped in which condition? • Also – who said what and who moved away

  32. The field experiment……. • On 62 of 65 trials the ‘cane’ victim was helped immediately • On 19 out of 38 trials the ‘drunk’ victim was helped immediately • of 81 trials once ONE person helped others did so too

  33. The field experiment ……. • What sort of people helped….? • Males more than females • More same ‘race’ helpers in drunk condition

  34. The field experiment ……. • How many people LEFT the critical area • 21 of 103 trials 34 people moved away … • more in the drunk condition • There was no diffusion of responsibility • Note: people could not ‘get away’

  35. The field experiment ….. • Conclusion (1) • The diffusion of responsibility hypothesis not supported • The more people there were the more they helped

  36. The field experiment …. • Conclusion (2) • The emergency created a ‘state of emotional arousal’ • arousal heightened by • empathy with victim • being close to situation • length of time of emergency

  37. The field experiment …. • This arousal state will be interpreted as • fear, sympathy or disgust • Can be reduced by • moving away • helping • deciding the victim is undeserving of help

  38. The field experiment …. • Piliavin et al give a TWO factor model of helping behaviour • Factor 1: The level of emotional arousal (empathy) • Factor 2: The result of a cost: benefit analysis • Thus low empathy + high cost may predict NO helping

  39. The field experiment ….. • Characteristics and situation of the victim may contribute to the our decision as to whether we help

  40. The field experiment …… • Was it ethical? • Did it have ecological validity

  41. Piliavin, Rodin and Piliavin … • Read .. the study

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