Imagine you're on a crowded subway and someone is clearly in need, maybe they’re sick or hurt, but no one helps them at first. That’s what Piliavin's Subway Study shows us.
How the Study Works
In this study, researchers watched people on a real subway to see how they acted when someone was in trouble. They used actors who pretended to be sick or hurt. The actors were either wearing normal clothes, like you might wear to school, or very fancy clothes, like you’d wear for a birthday party.
People were more likely to help the person in normal clothes than the one in fancy clothes. Why? It felt easier to imagine themselves in the same situation as someone who looked just like them, not someone who seemed too different.
What It Teaches Us
This study shows that we're more likely to help people who look like us. It's like when you see a friend drop their ice cream and you rush to help, but you might ignore someone else’s spilled soda because they’re not your friend.
So the next time you see someone in need, remember, helping them might just feel like helping you. Imagine you're on a crowded subway and someone is clearly in need, maybe they’re sick or hurt, but no one helps them at first. That’s what Piliavin's Subway Study shows us.
Examples
- A man on a crowded subway collapses, will someone help him?
- Passengers ignore a person in need until one steps in.
- People are more likely to help if they're close to the situation.
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See also
- What Makes a ‘Good’ Leader Distinguishable from a ‘Great’ One?
- Why Do Humans Have a 'Fight or Flight' Response?
- What Makes Some People Left-Handed?
- What is the Sociability?
- Can You Picture Things in Your Mind? I Can’t | Alex Rosenthal | TED
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