Altruism in the Crowd: Paradoxes of Collective Behavior and Crowd Neurobiology
Introduction: From the Psychology of the Masses to Prosocial Action
Classical theories of crowd behavior (G. Le Bon, G. Tarde, S. Moscovici) emphasize its irrationality, deindividuation, and tendency to destructive actions. However, modern research in social psychology and neuroscience demonstrates that powerful forms of altruism —无私的帮助陌生人,在高度匿名性和压力条件下 — can also manifest in crowds. This phenomenon represents a paradox: an environment considered conducive to aggression becomes a catalyst for heroism. Altruism in the crowd is not an exception but a systemic property that arises when biological predispositions, social context, and extreme circumstances collide.
1. Neurobiological Foundations: Empathy and "Group Instinct"
The key mechanism explaining altruistic impulses in crowds is the empathetic response, which has a neurobiological basis in humans.
Mirror neurons and the insula. When observing another person's suffering, the same neural networks are activated in us as when experiencing pain ourselves (anterior insula, anterior cingulate cortex). In a crowd, where emotions are transmitted non-verbally through facial expressions, gestures, and cries (emotional contagion), this activation can be particularly strong and immediate. The crowd does not "depersonalize" at this moment; on the contrary, it hyperpersonalizes the pain of others, making it physically tangible.
Oxytocin and dopamine. A stressful situation in the crowd can trigger the release of oxytocin — a neuropeptide associated not only with attachment but also with increased trust and readiness for cooperation in the face of external threats. At the same time, the act of helping triggers the reward system (ventral striatum), releasing dopamine. In this way, the brain "rewards" the individual for prosocial action even in a chaotic environment.
Interesting fact: A study conducted after the Boston Marathon bombings in 2013 showe ...
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