| Literature DB >> 28562686 |
Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard1,2, Lasse Suonperä Liebst2, Wim Bernasco1,3, Marie Bruvik Heinskou4, Richard Philpot5, Mark Levine5, Peter Verbeek6.
Abstract
Post-aggression consolation is assumed to occur in humans as well as in chimpanzees. While consolation following peer aggression has been observed in children, systematic evidence of consolation in human adults is rare. We used surveillance camera footage of the immediate aftermath of nonfatal robberies to observe the behaviors and characteristics of victims and bystanders. Consistent with empathy explanations, we found that consolation was linked to social closeness rather than physical closeness. While females were more likely to console than males, males and females were equally likely to be consoled. Furthermore, we show that high levels of threat during the robbery increased the likelihood of receiving consolation afterwards. These patterns resemble post-aggression consolation in chimpanzees and suggest that emotions of empathic concern are involved in consolation across humans and chimpanzees.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28562686 PMCID: PMC5451014 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Logit analysis of consolation among 3680 dyads. Quadratic assignment procedure.
| Explanatory variable | b | or | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| Socially close | 1.999 | 7.38 | .000 |
| Potential provider female | .978 | 2.66 | .002 |
| Potential recipient is victim | 3.593 | 36.34 | .000 |
| Number of subjects in aftermath | .019 | 1.02 | .000 |
1 estimate (average of 1000 iterations)
2 odds ratio = exp(b)
3 p-value (based on 1000 iterations)
4 Four individuals’ roles (employee or customer) were unknown, affecting 30 dyads in total.
Logit analysis of consolation among 3364 dyads. Quadratic assignment procedure.
| Explanatory variable | b | or | p |
|---|---|---|---|
| Socially close | 2.040 | 7.69 | .000 |
| Potential provider female | 1.002 | 2.72 | .000 |
| Potential recipient is victim | 3.500 | 33.12 | .000 |
| Number of subjects in aftermath | .037 | 1.04 | .000 |
| Physically close (< 2m) | .991 | 2.69 | n.s. |
| Same age group | .176 | 1.19 | n.s. |
| Same ethnic group | .032 | 1.03 | n.s. |
| Potential provider is victim | -.884 | 0.41 | n.s. |
| Potential recipient is female | .439 | 1.55 | n.s. |
1 estimate (average of 1000 iterations)
2 odds ratio = exp(b)
3 p-value (based on 1000 iterations), n.s. = p ≥ .05
4 Missing values on 346 dyads due to unknown values on the explanatory variables