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Giving Compass' Take:
• Researchers indicate that seeing prosocial behaviors- watching individuals perform acts of kindness- can be contagious and motivate individuals to care about each other.
• How can seeing prosocial behaviors impact philanthropists?
• Read about the health benefits of donating your time and money.
The finding could help drive cooperative behavior in communities navigating through the health crisis.
In their new study, researchers confirmed that people can be heavily influenced by others, especially when it comes to taking on prosocial behavior—actions designed to benefit society as a whole.
Understanding this is important now, when large-scale cooperation and adoption of protective behaviors—wearing face masks and avoiding gatherings—have important implications for the well-being of entire communities, the researchers say.
“Just like the deadly virus, cooperative behavior can also be transmitted across people,” says Haesung (Annie) Jung, who led the study while earning a PhD at the University of Texas at Austin.
“These findings remind the public that their behavior can impact what others around do; and the more individuals cooperate to stop the spread of the disease, the more likely others nearby will do the same.”
Reviewing the evidence from decades of studies, the researchers found that exposing people to “prosocial models”—watching someone perform an act of kindness—elicited some subsequent helpful acts. This response was partly driven by “goal contagion,” the researchers say, whereby witnessing prosocial actions lead people to adopt the underlying goal associated with the observed behavior, such as caring for others’ well-being.
They also found that people were more motivated to help after witnessing other people benefit from the prosocial model than when they benefitted from the prosocial act. This shows that the effect triggered by adopting others’ prosocial goals outweighed other potential motives triggered by self-benefit, such as doing it because they felt grateful.
The researchers suggest that adopting this type of framework could go a long way in influencing new prosocial behaviors amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Read the full article about doing good for others from UT Austin at Futurity.