Project

Francqui Start-Up Grant: Emilie Caspar

Code
365C02321
Duration
01 October 2021 → 30 September 2024
Funding
Funding by bilateral agreement (private and foundations)
Research disciplines
  • Social sciences
    • Personality psychology
    • Applied psychology not elsewhere classified
    • Neuroimaging
    • Cognitive processes
  • Medical and health sciences
    • Behavioural neuroscience
    • Cognitive neuroscience
    • Neurosciences not elsewhere classified
Keywords
obedience trauma genocide Field research empathy for pain sense of agency responsibility Social neurosciences Cognitive neurosciences
 
Project description

The History of Mankind is plagued by immoral acts of obedience that have caused the loss of many lives, of entire cultures and civilizations. Regrettably, there is a lack of research investigating the neuro-cognitive processes that play a role in preventing individuals from complying with immoral orders. By using methods from an array of disciplines, I here offer to investigate for the first time this question in a highly ecological paradigm, in which participants will be given the order to inflict a painful shock on another individual in exchange for a monetary gain. Two main neuro-cognitive processes will be considered: the sense of agency that one experiences when performing a voluntary action and the empathic response towards others’ pain. The main hypothesis is that individuals who retain a high sense of agency and empathy for pain even under coercion are more likely to resist immoral orders despite potential social costs. I thus expect that the degree of upregulation of those processes will correlate with the prosocial disobedience rate of volunteers, that is, when they refuse the orders of the experimenter to deliver pain to someone else in exchange for money. I will also investigate how individual and social differences modulate the sense of agency and empathy for pain, and thus, by extension, resistance to immoral orders. The project will include healthy adults, a military population and a population whose family history is rooted in highly traumatic events due to a genocide and a population of “Righteous Among the Nations”, that is, individuals who rescued lives from extermination during genocides. With this project I aim to pioneer a new area of research that will have deep societal implications. In practice, I intend to develop specific education programs for both military members and civilians in vulnerable societies that seek to prevent illegitimate violence on the ground of compliance to an authoritative figure.