A decade after scientists discovered that lab rats will rescue a fellow rat in distress, but not a rat they consider an outsider, new research pinpoints the brain regions that drive rats to prioritize their nearest and dearest in times of crisis. It also suggests humans may share the same neural bias.
From: University of California – Berkeley
July
13, 2021 -- The findings, published today, Tuesday, July 13, in the
journal eLife, suggest that altruism, whether in rodents or humans,
is motivated by social bonding and familiarity rather than sympathy or guilt.
"We have found that the group
identity of the distressed rat dramatically influences the neural response and
decision to help, revealing the biological mechanism of ingroup bias,"
said study senior author Daniela Kaufer, a professor of neuroscience and
integrative biology at UC Berkeley.
With nativism and conflicts between
religious, ethnic and racial groups on the rise globally, the results suggest
that social integration, rather than segregation, may boost cooperation among
humans.
"Priming a common group membership
may be a more powerful driver for inducing pro-social motivation than
increasing empathy," said study lead author Inbal Ben-Ami Bartal, an assistant
professor of psychobiology at Tel-Aviv University in Israel.
Bartal launched the study in 2014 as a
postdoctoral Miller fellow in Kaufer's laboratory at UC Berkeley. Bartal,
Kaufer and UC Berkeley psychology professor Dacher Keltner led a research team
that sought to identify the brain networks activated in rats in response to
empathy, and whether they are mirrored in humans. The results suggest they are.
"The finding of a similar neural
network involved in empathic helping in rats, as in humans, provides new
evidence that caring for others is based on a shared neurobiological mechanism
across mammals," Bartal said.
Using fiber photometry,
immunohistochemistry, calcium imaging and other diagnostic tools, researchers
found that all the rats they studied experienced empathy in response to another
rat's signs of distress.
However, to act on that empathy, the
helper rat's neural reward circuitry had to be triggered, and that only
occurred if the trapped rat was of the same type as the helper rat, or member
of its ingroup.
"Surprisingly, we found that the
network associated with empathy is activated when you see a distressed peer,
whether they are in the ingroup or not," Kaufer said. "In contrast,
the network associated with reward signaling was active only for ingroup
members and correlated with helping behavior."
Specifically, the rats' empathy
correlated with the brain's sensory and orbitofrontal regions, as well as with
the anterior insula. Meanwhile, the rodents' decision to help was linked to
activity in the nucleus accumbens, a reward center with neurotransmitters that
include dopamine and serotonin.
For the study, more than 60 pairs of
caged rats were monitored over the course of two weeks. Some of the pairs were
of the same strain or genetic tribe while others were not.
In each trial, one rat would be trapped
inside a transparent cylinder while the other roamed free in a larger enclosure
surrounding the cylinder.
While unconstrained rats consistently
signaled empathy in response to the plight of trapped rats, they only worked to
free those that were part of their ingroup, in which case they would lean or
butt their heads against the cage door to release the rat.
Indeed, in reviewing the results of
multiple measures to understand the neural roots of that bias, the research
team found that while all the rodents in the trials sensed their cage partner's
distress, their brains' reward circuitry was only activated when they came to
the rescue of a member of their ingroup.
Moreover, humans and other mammals share
virtually the same empathy and reward regions in the brain, implying that we
may have similar biases toward our ingroup when it comes to helping others,
Bartal noted.
"Overall, the findings suggest that
empathy alone doesn't predict helping behavior, and that's really a crucial
point," she said. "So, if you want to motivate people to help others
who are suffering, it may be that you have to increase their feeling of
belonging and group membership, and work toward a common identity."
"Encouragingly," she added,
"we find that this mechanism is very flexible and determined primarily by
social experience. We will now try to understand how pro-social motivation
shifts when rats become friends, and how that is reflected in their brain
activity."
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/07/210713165303.htm
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