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  2. Herd mentality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herd_mentality

    The scientists discovered that people end up blindly following one or two instructed people who appear to know where they are going. The results of this experiment showed that it only takes 5% of confident looking and instructed people to influence the direction of the other 95% of people in the crowd, and the 200 volunteers did this without ...

  3. Helping behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helping_behavior

    The negative-state relief model of helping [11] states that people help because of egoism. Egoistic motives lead a person to help others in bad circumstances in order to reduce personal distress experienced from knowing the situation of the people in need. Helping behavior happens only when the personal distress cannot be relieved by other actions.

  4. Panurge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panurge

    All the other sheep, crying and bleating in the same intonation, started to throw themselves in the sea after it, all in a line. The herd was such that once one jumped, so jumped its companions. It was not possible to stop them, as you know, with sheep, it's natural to always follow the first one, wherever it may go.

  5. Being kind to strangers is good for you. Why it's healthy to ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/being-kind-strangers-good...

    It helps us foster social connections with the people we’ve helped, psychologist Heidi Kar explains to Yahoo Life. She notes that human beings, at our core, “are social creatures who rely on ...

  6. List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases

    Illusory superiority, the tendency to overestimate one's desirable qualities, and underestimate undesirable qualities, relative to other people. (Also known as "Lake Wobegon effect", "better-than-average effect", or "superiority bias".) [43] Naïve cynicism, expecting more egocentric bias in others than in oneself.

  7. Bystander effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bystander_effect

    For example, Bibb Latané and Judith Rodin (1969) staged an experiment around a woman in distress, where subjects were either alone, with a friend, or with a stranger. 70 percent of the people alone called out or went to help the woman after they believed she had fallen and was hurt, but when paired with a stranger only 40 percent offered help. [7]

  8. 30 Moments In History That Got Ghosted By Humanity - AOL

    www.aol.com/101-people-sharing-strange-history...

    The US secretly injecting people (typically poor / minorities, including children and pregnant women) with plutonium and other radioactive materials, and then studying them for decades.

  9. Altruism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altruism

    The importance of 'iythar (also known as īthār) lies in sacrifice for the sake of the greater good; Islam considers those practicing īthār as abiding by the highest degree of nobility. [72] This is similar to the notion of chivalry. A constant concern for God results in a careful attitude towards people, animals, and other things in this ...