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David Ropeik

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Statistical Numbing: Why Millions Can Die, and We Don't Care

Posted: 08/15/11 12:55 PM ET

Four year-old Khafran was near death three days ago when he was brought to the refugee camp hospital. He was emaciated, his ribs showing through his taut dry skin. He panted for breath. His desperate eyes bulged. His mother, Alyan, could only sit at his side and watch, helpless, sad beyond comprehension, but herself too malnourished to cry. Doctors are still not sure Khafran can be saved.

The famine in the Horn of Africa has left more than 12 million people malnourished, including half of Somalia's population. The UN says 640,000 Somali children are starving, and more than 29,000 children in southern Somalia have starved to death in the last 90 days.

Which of those two paragraphs was more emotionally powerful? It should have been the second, shouldn't it, based on the scale of the suffering, 640,000 starving kids to one? But the first paragraph almost certainly carried more emotional punch. The famine in northeast Africa is once again forcing us to confront the truth about the way our brains work, a profound truth with sobering implications. As smart as we think we are, as rational as we believe our powerful brains enable us to be, our perceptions are the product of both reason and emotion, a combination of the facts and how those facts feel, and sometimes this emotional/instinctive/affective system can produce perceptions with tragic consequences.

Mother Theresa said "If I look at the mass I will never act. If I look at the one, I will." Josef Stalin said "One death is a tragedy. One million is a statistic." Numerous experiments have helped verify the truth behind what both the saint and the mass murderer knew intuitively, that we relate more closely to what happens to one person than to what happens to large numbers of people.

In one study, people were asked what they'd donate to life saving efforts that might help save one child. They were also asked what they'd donate toward life saving efforts that would help eight children.

One Child $11.00

Eight Children $5.00

In another study, people were paid to participate in an unrelated psychological quiz, and on the way out they were given the opportunity to donate up to $5.00 of their earnings to Save The Children. They were given three options:

--- They could donate to help Rokia, a 7-year-old Malian girl. The subjects were shown a picture of Rokia. They were willing to give $2.25.

--- They could donate to help the hundreds of thousands of children in eastern Africa who were starving. They were willing to give only $1.15.

--- The third option was to help Rokia specifically, but along with this request subjects were also given the statistics about the other starving east African kids. The same people who were willing to give $2.25 when it was just for Rokia, were only willing to give $1.40 when the request to help Rokia included information about the larger statistics!

Help Rokia $2.25

Help Statistical Lives $1.15

Help Rokia (with statistics) $1.40

This statistical numbing begins at anything more than ONE! Researchers asked three groups about donating to save lives. The first group was shown a single child's face and name and asked to donate to save that one child. The second group was shown another child's face and name and asked to donate for that child. The third group saw both faces, and was asked to donate to save both.

Save Child One $3.25

Save Child Two $3.25

Save Both $3.00

Paul Slovic, one of the pioneers of research into the way we perceive risk, calls this greater concern for the one than the many "a fundamental deficiency in our humanity." As the world watches but, insufficiently moved, fails to act to prevent mass starvation or stop genocides in Congo or Kosovo or Cambodia or so many more, who would not agree with such a lament. But as heartless as it seems to care more about the one than the many, it makes perfect sense in terms of human psychology.

You are a person, not a number. You don't see digits in the mirror, you see a face. And you don't see a crowd. You see an individual. So you and I relate more powerfully to the reality of a single person than to the numbing, faceless, nameless, lifeless, abstraction of numbers. "Statistics," as Slovic put it in a paper titled "Psychic Numbing and Genocide," are "human beings with the tears dried off." This tendency to relate more emotionally to the reality of a single person than to two or more people, or to the abstraction of statistics, is especially powerful when it comes to the way we perceive risk and danger, because what might happen to a single real person, might happen to you. As the familiar adage puts it, "There but for the grace of God go I."

This has all sorts of profound implications. Statistical numbing plays a huge role in what the news media covers, and what it doesn't, since the media are in the business of bringing us information we are likely to pay attention to, and our attention is less drawn to numbers than stories about individual people (which explains the success of the narrative device of weaving stories about big issues around a personal example). Less coverage means less concern, because we certainly can't be moved by these tragedies if we don't know much about them. And public concern drives government policy, so statistical numbing helps explain why nations so often fail to expend their resources to save people elsewhere who are starving, or dying of disease, or being raped and murdered in the tens and hundreds of thousands.

Remember that research about willingness to donate? It's not just research. British donations to help the victims of the 2004 south Asian tsunami, which got intense media coverage in part because it was a singular catastrophic event rather than an ongoing crisis, were 45 times higher than they have been so far to help feed starving east Africans, regardless of the huge numbers of victims in both cases. Donations in the U.S. for the African famine are also lower than for many other disasters. "I'm asking myself where is everybody and how loud do I have to yell and from what mountaintop," asked one frustrated senior fundraiser about the current east African famine. Sorry, but there is no mountaintop high enough nor voice loud enough to overcome this intrinsic aspect of human psychology.

The profound and sobering truth is that our perceptions are an inextricable blend of reason and subjective emotion. Between the one real human and huge but abstract numbers, the numbers simply don't carry the same emotional power, and they never will. One death will always move us more than one million. This "fundamental deficiency in our humanity" is an inescapable part of the human animal. Perhaps by recognizing this about ourselves, and its tragic implications, we can do something about it. But that is hoping that reason can overcome emotion in the way we perceive things. Sadly, the evidence suggests that there will be a lot more suffering before that happens.

This blog originally ran at Risk: Reason and Reality, at BigThink.com.

 
 
 

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Four year-old Khafran was near death three days ago when he was brought to the refugee camp hospital. He was emaciated, his ribs showing through his taut dry skin. He panted for breath. His desperate ...
Four year-old Khafran was near death three days ago when he was brought to the refugee camp hospital. He was emaciated, his ribs showing through his taut dry skin. He panted for breath. His desperate ...
 
 
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04:06 PM on 08/17/2011
Very interesting article, even though I don't see how the results of the research on the willingness to help relate to a greater amount of donations to help the victims of Japan's earthquake than those made to save lives in Africa. Such difference has nothing to do with the "one vs. many" dichotomy, but with the traditional West's attitude towards Africa...
05:29 PM on 08/16/2011
There might be one other thing going on, as the example of the tsunami vs famine illustrates. People are less likely to help if they think the situation is an intractable problem. They want their donation to make for a total happy ending. If they give to efforts re Somalia, they know that they haven't really made a dent. If it's just to one person, they can think the entire problem has been solved.
07:25 AM on 08/18/2011
I totally agree with you. People want to feel responsible for those people, they want to feel that their help mas made the difference that was missing. I have donated to Doctors without Borders because I strongly believe in their work, but I felt like "Oh my God, will this 100 dollar donation really help someone?!!"
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americancolonyinhell
09:19 AM on 08/16/2011
Makes sense. Clever way of trying to bring in donations as well. CNN has been doing a good job of reporting on the famine. It would be interesting to read about this same topic as it relates to race.
04:51 AM on 08/16/2011
What stops me from sending money for African famine victims is the failure of the aid agencies to provide birth control. Tthe population of Ethiopia has doubled since it's last famine. Tthe military of Ethiopia have consumed the money which could have stabilized the population by educating and empowering women has been spent on it. One hundred million relief dollars went to buy war materiel. After the Haitian earthquake Haitians continue to live in abject overty despite billions of donated aid.

I donated a large amount of money to a small NGO to empower Malawi women. I allowed the NGO to decide how to do that and I demanded an accounting of what had been done in one year. The NGO bought livestock which the women cared for and could sell the products of - e.g. eggs or chickens etc. I met a woman involved in the project. It worked very well. The women managed their livestock and aided women in nearby villages . At no time were the men allowed to have a say in the way the livestock and the earnings of same, allowed to be involved. A couple of years later I wanted to donate money to build a biogas latrine but was told this wasn't possible. The head of the NGO didn't want me telling him what to do with my money and knew nothing of biogas latrines. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure Until NGO's start preventing they don't get my
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americancolonyinhell
09:21 AM on 08/16/2011
Hmm? Interesting.
Norm
Read think read analyze read comment
01:33 PM on 08/16/2011
I figure it this way: The best I can do is to give the money. It may get to whomever I intend it for or it may not, but I did all I could with what I know. It bothers me - a lot - that children die because of inadequate family planning, but withholding funds because of failures or behaviors smacks of moral superiority and there is way to much of that going around.
01:48 PM on 08/16/2011
So you choose to give so you may feel self righteous about yourself, ignoring the fact that you are only causing more misery and suffering than if you didn't give. If people would hold the agencies responsible for what they do with the money and not give otherwise then you would find that those agencies will do the right thing. Instead, people like you don't care and the people stealing from the agencies know that. Thus, the root problems never get solved and the suffering and misery only grows, thanks in large part to you. I hope you are proud of yourself.
02:21 PM on 08/16/2011
Norm; I gave money and the money I gave provided clean water, food that was nutritious and delicious. And the women shared the bounty with the women in the next village and those women shared with the women in the village next to them. My money was like an immunization shot. The children were fed, the women empowered which meant a lower birth rate and education for the children. Because a well was dug the village would be able to live through a drought. It was money well spent. No famine and an upward spiral instead of a downward spiral.
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Edward Wilkes
Poet/Stage Actor
04:40 AM on 08/16/2011
Not everyone can afford to give and many that do give, money, material things such as cloths and non perishable food and water many times just does not reach the intended victims for many different reasons. There is nothing really the average person can do to change this. But better we pray to whatever God we believe in to help when we ourselves are unable.
11:53 PM on 08/15/2011
Its not that nobody "cares", its that nobody knows what to do

UNOSOM III?
07:32 PM on 08/15/2011
As long as things happen to "those other people", no one will care because it is not personal or easily related to
02:20 PM on 08/15/2011
Don't get me wrong, I believe what you say about the brain/mind reasoning about the one/many ratio, but no one has any money and this is everywhere in the world, and it plays a part. I just came back from Brussels and everywhere people are complaining. When those living in coutries that are supposedly well-to-do start having financial problems then the donating will dwindle.

I think rich people who are in the government and own and head coporations forget the fact that it isn't the millionaires spending $60 million in a year but the middle- and lower-class people spending $600 million in the year that really count.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
07:33 PM on 08/15/2011
There's plenty of money , it's just clotted in the richest 1000 families. Tax them, prosecute the bankster for fraud and take triple damages, bankrupt them all personally, who had anything to do with the SWAP and securitization schemes.

The real problem is getting the aid to the the people without the gangster taking it.

Air drop individual aid packages from 50,000 feet. all at once, so the gangs cannot seize it.

DO NOT relax laws against bribery, it only strengthens the gangster hold on the poor.

Or course the USA believes in trickle down, not bottom up democracy, and that's the problem.

History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over government­­s by controllin­­g money and it's issuance."

"When economic power became concentrat­­ed in a few hands, then political power flowed to those possessors and away from the citizens, ultimately resulting in an oligarchy or tyranny." John Adams

"As riches increase and accumulate in few hands . . . the tendency of things will be to depart from the republican standard." Alexander Hamilton

"I hope we shall . . . crush in [its] birth the aristocrac­­y of our monied corporatio­­ns." Thomas Jefferson
09:53 AM on 08/16/2011
I like that word clotted. Clotted and stolen.