TY - JOUR
T1 - Empathic choices for animals versus humans
T2 - the role of choice context and perceived cost
AU - Cameron, C. Daryl
AU - Lengieza, Michael L.
AU - Hadjiandreou, Eliana
AU - Swim, Janet K.
AU - Chiles, Robert M.
N1 - Funding Information:
The current research was supported by a grant from the UCLA Animal Law program and funding support through the Rock Ethics Institute. The first author is also supported by grant #61150 from the John Templeton Foundation and has presented some of this work in a colloquium at Penn State. The fifth author is also supported by funding from USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Federal Appropriations (under Project PEN04437 and Accession #1012188). We thank Julian A. Scheffer for feedback on survey design, Cassie Sieradzky for helping with programming, Marco Ciappetta for assistance in coding, India Oates for assistance with stimuli, and Nicholas Buentello, Natalia Reed, and Alyssa Sweeney for assistance in compiling references.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - People appear to empathize with cases of animal suffering yet to disregard such suffering when it conflicts with human needs. In three studies, we used an empathy regulation measure–the empathy selection task–to test whether people choose or avoid sharing in experiences of animals versus humans. In Study 1, when choosing between sharing experiences of animals or humans, participants preferred humans and rated sharing animal (versus human) experiences as more cognitively costly. In Studies 2a-2b, the choice to share experiences or be objective was done without a forced choice between animals and humans. When empathy opportunities for humans and animals were not contrasted against each other, participants avoided experience sharing for humans but not for animals. Manipulations of prosocial cost in these studies did not consistently moderate choice differences. Freeing people from contexts that pit empathy for animals against empathy for humans may diminish motivated disregard of animals’ experiences.
AB - People appear to empathize with cases of animal suffering yet to disregard such suffering when it conflicts with human needs. In three studies, we used an empathy regulation measure–the empathy selection task–to test whether people choose or avoid sharing in experiences of animals versus humans. In Study 1, when choosing between sharing experiences of animals or humans, participants preferred humans and rated sharing animal (versus human) experiences as more cognitively costly. In Studies 2a-2b, the choice to share experiences or be objective was done without a forced choice between animals and humans. When empathy opportunities for humans and animals were not contrasted against each other, participants avoided experience sharing for humans but not for animals. Manipulations of prosocial cost in these studies did not consistently moderate choice differences. Freeing people from contexts that pit empathy for animals against empathy for humans may diminish motivated disregard of animals’ experiences.
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U2 - 10.1080/00224545.2021.1997890
DO - 10.1080/00224545.2021.1997890
M3 - Article
C2 - 35037571
AN - SCOPUS:85122857768
SN - 0022-4545
VL - 162
SP - 161
EP - 177
JO - Journal of Social Psychology
JF - Journal of Social Psychology
IS - 1
ER -