(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Empathy’s in Our Genes? | Greater Good
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20170612101203/http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/empathys_in_our_genes
   
 

Empathy’s in Our Genes?

By Alex Dixon | April 30, 2009 | 0 comments

Pavlov taught his dogs to slobber at the sound of a bell. Now, in a recent study, researchers have taught mice to flinch in pain at the sound of a buzzer. The difference is that the mice learned that behavior from watching each other—and their reaction suggests that there's a genetic basis to empathy.

In the study, published in the journal PloS ONE, researchers from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and Oregon Health and Science University bred two different strains of mice, with two different genetic make-ups. One strain is known to be quite gregarious while the other is much less social.

With these genetically-engineered social and nonsocial mice, the researchers set up their experiment. They put one ordinary mouse in a cage and administered a mild electric shock to its foot while sounding a buzzer for 30 seconds. The mouse squeaked in distress.

In another cage, a mouse of either the social or antisocial strain looked on, within earshot of the buzzer.

Researchers then placed the voyeur mouse in the cage it had just been watching, and rang the buzzer.

The two genetic variations reacted differently. The social mice tended to freeze in place, as if—recalling the suffering they had sensed earlier in their neighboring mouse—they anticipated an experience of pain themselves. Antisocial mice were far less likely to behave this way; they showed just as little distress as did other mice whose neighbor-mouse had not been shocked.

The results suggest not just that mice can learn to feel another's pain, but that empathy may be encoded in animals' genes. After all, the two kinds of mouse differed only in their genes, yet one strain was far more likely to understand that a comrade was in pain—and to expect that same experience for themselves when placed in the same conditions.

Based on their finding, the authors conclude that "empathy may be widespread among mammalian species."

Tracker Pixel for Entry
 
 
 

Greater Good wants to know:
Do you think this article will influence your opinions or behavior?

  • Very Likely

  • Likely

  • Unlikely

  • Very Unlikely

  • Not sure

 
About The Author

Alex Dixon is a Greater Good editorial assistant.

  

Like this article?

Here's what you can do:

Donate
 
  
 
blog comments powered by Disqus
 

Most...

  
  

Greater Good Events

The Greater Good Science Center Summer Institute for Educators 2017
Clark Kerr Campus, UC-Berkeley
Sunday, June 25 - Friday, June 30, 2017 OR Sunday, July 16 - Friday, July 21, 2017


The Greater Good Science Center Summer Institute for Educators 2017

The GGSC’s six-day Summer Institute equips education professionals with prosocial learning strategies, tools and processes that benefit both students and teachers.


» ALL EVENTS
 
 

Take a Greater Good Quiz!

How compassionate are you? How generous, grateful, or forgiving? Find out!

» TAKE A QUIZ
 
A new course from Greater Good Science Center Senior Fellow Christine Carter.

Watch Greater Good Videos

Jon Kabat-Zinn

Talks by inspiring speakers like Jon Kabat-Zinn, Dacher Keltner, and Barbara Fredrickson.

Watch
 

Greater Good Resources

 
 
» MORE STUDIES
 
 
» MORE ORGS
 

Book of the Week

Roots of Empathy By Mary Gordon Mary Gordon explains how best to nurture empathy and social emotional literacy in all children—and thereby reduce aggression, antisocial behavior, and bullying.

» READ MORE
 
Is she flirting with you? Take the quiz and find out.
"It is a great good and a great gift, this Greater Good. I bow to you for your efforts to bring these uplifting and illuminating expressions of humanity, grounded in good science, to the attention of us all."  
Jon Kabat-Zinn

Best-selling author and founder of the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program

thnx advertisement