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Sympathy and callousness: The impact of deliberative thought on donations to identifiable and statistical victims
Authors:Deborah A. Small   George Loewenstein  Paul Slovic
Affiliation:aUniversity of Pennsylvania, 700 Jon M. Huntsman Hall, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6340, USA;bDepartment of Social & Decision Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, 208 Porter Hall, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA;cDecision Research, 1201 Oak Street, Suite 200, Eugene, OR 97401, USA
Abstract:When donating to charitable causes, people do not value lives consistently. Money is often concentrated on a single victim even though more people would be helped, if resources were dispersed or spent protecting future victims. We examine the impact of deliberating about donation decisions on generosity. In a series of field experiments, we show that teaching or priming people to recognize the discrepancy in giving toward identifiable and statistical victims has perverse effects: individuals give less to identifiable victims but do not increase giving to statistical victims, resulting in an overall reduction in caring and giving. Thus, it appears that, when thinking deliberatively, people discount sympathy towards identifiable victims but fail to generate sympathy toward statistical victims.
Keywords:Identifiable victim effect   Sympathy   Generosity
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