Deutsch Intern
  • Drei Studierende vor der Neuen Uni am Sanderring.

Money can increase willingness to help – but only if empathy is low

09/12/2022

People who help others do not necessarily want to be rewarded for this. However, a reward can motivate low-empathic individuals to provide help. This is shown by a new study.

Helping the neighbor in Corona times when he is in isolation? Some people find it easier to do so if they receive a reward in return.
Helping the neighbor in Corona times when he is in isolation? Some people find it easier to do so if they receive a reward in return. (Image: VichoT / iStockphoto.coom)

A classic finding of social psychology research is that people donate less blood if they are paid to do so. If there is no payment, which means that they act simply out of a desire to help their fellow human beings, they give significantly more blood. The decline in their willingness to donate can probably be attributed to one motive: concern that third parties might conclude that the only thing driving them to be socially engaged is money.

This finding does not apply to everyone, though. Individuals with comparatively low levels of empathy can certainly be motivated by a financial incentive to behave in a prosocial manner. This is demonstrated by a new study conducted by scientists from the universities of Würzburg and Frankfurt under the lead of Grit Hein, Professor of Translational Social Neuroscience at the Department of Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy at the University Hospital of Würzburg. The study was published in the journal Social Neuroscience.

Empathy and egoism

Even though prosocial behaviour has been well researched, the “evidence regarding the effects of incentives on prosocial decisions is inconsistent,” explains Grit Hein. Since this evidence is based mainly on behavioural observations, it does not provide insights into the underlying motivational processes. “As a result, it remains unclear whether and how financial incentives impact other motives that drive people to help,” says the scientist.

It is clear that incentives fuel egoism, i.e. the pursuit of a personal gain. Without an incentive, people often help based on empathy, namely the ability to share the other’s emotions or states. “People who help on the basis of an empathic motivation strive to increase the wellbeing of the other person, irrespective of a potential reward. In the case of an egoistic motive, the benefit for others is only a byproduct. The real goal is to improve one’s own wellbeing,” explains Hein. Grit Hein and her colleagues have now explored how financial incentives and a resulting egoistic motivation influence empathy-driven decisions.

The study

The participants of the study were asked to make egoistic decisions or decisions in favour of the other person by allocating points for their own benefit or fairly. While doing so, there neural responses were recorded using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).

In one task, they allocated the points after witnessing the other person in an unfortunate situation – in this case, receiving a painful shock to the back of the hand. Here, the decision was therefore based on empathy with the other person. In a second task, the participants observed pain stimulation in the other person, and, in addition were promised a bonus if they “helped”, i.e. distributed points fairly.

Analyzing the effect of incentives on prosocial decisions

For analysing the results, the scientists used a special method known as drift-diffusion modelling (DDM), which makes it possible to identify how empathy alone or coupled with a financial incentive influences the processing of the decision. For example, it can reveal whether only the speed and efficiency of the decision change or a person’s preference also switches in favour of an egoistic decision or a prosocial decision.

The results showed that a financial bonus increases the efficiency of decisions in favour of the other person in low empathic people, but not in high empathic participants. This effect was also found on the neural level. In low empathic individuals, the bonus increased neural activation in the anterior insula, a brain region that is associated with the processing of empathy. People that helped based on empathy anyway showed no such effect.

“These findings show that financial incentives only work in people who are inherently less empathic and prosocial – and even in these individuals they only increase the efficiency of the concrete decision. A person’s basic preference for making an egoistic decision or one in favour of another person is not changed by financial incentives,” is how Grit Hein summarises the findings of the study.

Original publication

Vassil Iotzov, Anne Saulin, Jochen Kaiser, Shihui Han & Grit Hein (2022) Financial incentives facilitate stronger neural computation of prosocial decisions in lower empathic adult females, Social Neuroscience, DOI: 10.1080/17470919.2022.2115550

Contact

Prof. Grit Hein, PhD, Professor of Translational Social Neuroscience, University and University Hospital of Würzburg, T: +49 931 201-77411, hein_g@ukw.de

By Gunnar Bartsch

Back