鈥淭he brain forms social impressions in a way that can enable forgiveness,鈥 said Yale psychologist Molly Crockett, senior author of the paper. 鈥淏ecause people sometimes behave badly by accident, we need to be able to update bad impressions that turn out to be mistaken. Otherwise, we might end relationships prematurely and miss out on the many benefits of social connection.鈥
Across a series of experiments, more than 1500 subjects observed the choices of two strangers who faced a moral dilemma: whether to inflict painful electric shocks on another person in exchange for money. While the 鈥済ood鈥 stranger mostly refused to shock another person for money, the 鈥渂ad鈥 stranger tended to maximize their profits despite the painful consequences. The subjects were asked their impressions of the strangers鈥 moral character and how confident they were about those impressions.
Subjects rapidly formed stable, positive impressions of the good stranger and were highly confident of their impressions. However, the subjects were far less confident that the bad stranger was truly bad and could change their minds quickly. For instance, when the bad stranger occasionally made a generous choice, subjects鈥 impressions immediately improved 鈥 until they witnessed the stranger鈥檚 next transgression.鈥
This pattern of impression updating may provide some insight into why people sometimes hold on to bad relationships, Crockett said. 鈥淲e think our findings reveal a basic predisposition towards giving others, even strangers, the benefit of the doubt. The human mind is built for maintaining social relationships, even when partners sometimes behave badly.鈥澨
The research also may eventually help shed light on psychiatric disorders involving social difficulties, such as Borderline Personality Disorder.
鈥淭he ability to accurately form impressions of others鈥 character is crucial for the development and maintenance of healthy relationships鈥 said Jenifer Siegel, an Oxford doctoral student and lead author of the paper. 鈥淲e have developed new tools for measuring impression formation, which could help improve our understanding of relational dysfunction.鈥
"Maintaining social relationships depends on our ability to forgive. We find that beliefs about people that behave badly are actually more flexible than for people that are good, and this might explain our ability to forgive mistakes." Dr Robb Rutledge, co-author, Principal Research Associate, Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging, 香港六合彩中特网 Queen Square Institute of Neurology
The research was funded by the Wellcome Trust and the Academy of Medical Sciences.
Further information
Jenifer Z. Siegel,听听Christoph Mathys,听Robb B. Rutledge听&听Molly J. Crockett.听 Nature Human Behaviour听(2018) . Available online 17th September 2018. DOI:听10.1038/s41562-018-0425-1
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