Caroline Driscoll-Braden
Caroline Driscoll-Braden
Doctoral Candidate
University of Louisville
Doctoral Candidate
University of Louisville
Behavioral Ecology. Ethology. Evolution.
Evolution of Empathy in Non-Human Animals
Caroline Driscoll
About Me
I am currently a doctoral candidate in the biology department at the University of Louisville. I received my master's in biology from Winthrop University in 2017 and have previously worked as a wildlife rehabilitation intern, a veterinary assistant at an emergency animal hospital, taught introduction to biology as an adjunct professor and have studied both American flamingos and African elephants in captive environments.
I have always had a passion for other animals and a profound interest in empathy. How could a seemingly other-oriented characteristic evolve and persist? Under my PI, Dr. Lee Dugatkin, my current research is focused on investigating the evolution of empathy in non-human. My experiments have examined the motivations behind helping behavior in rats, whether the introduction of a cost tempers the empathetic response in rats, and the role of communication in rat helping behavior.
If you are interested in discussing my research or empathy in nonhumans, please email me caroline.driscoll@louisville.edu
Current Research
Although there is substantial evidence of other animals displaying the most basic of empathetic abilities, ie. emotional contagion and mimicry (ie. Miller et al., 1959; Wechkin et al., 1964; Langford et al., 2006), studies exploring more sophisticated abilities, ie. targeted helping and consolation, have mostly focused on primates, cetaceans, and elephants (all reviewed in: Pérez-Manrique & Gomila, 2018). Within the last decade, evidence for more advanced empathy has also been found in smaller-brained animals like rats (Ben-Ami Bartal, 2011, 2014, 2016; Sato et al, 2015) but such studies have been met with criticisms and alternative explanations (Jentsch & Ringbach, 2011; Silberberg et al., 2014; Schwartz et al., 2017; Perez-Manrique & Gomila, 2018).
While empathy can stimulate prosocial behavior, it can also elicit personal distress which could motivate self-directed behavior to alleviate one’s own distress to an observed situation (Batson et al., 1987). This aspect of prosocial behavior has not been a focus in previous studies, but offers an interesting avenue by which to explore motivations behind helping behavior. One of my experiments explored the empathetic response behavior in rats when presented with a distressed cage-mate when an option to escape is presented to determine if helping behavior in rats is the result of an attempt to alleviate another’s distress or ameliorate personal stress.
Upon completion of the aforementioned study, we wanted to add to the body of literature that has previously demonstrated that rats will help a distressed individual across various contexts by examining helping behavior in rats when a cost was present to determine if the presence of a cost hinders the occurence of helping behavior.
Through both of these studies, all trials were video and audio recorded. The video recordings help us better understand activity levels and movements associated with helping behavior while the audio recordings are analyzed for both distress and anticipation of reward US calls to discern the role of communication in helping behavior.
Publications
Helping behavior in rats
Dugatkin, L. and Driscoll, C. 2021. Empathy in Nonhumans: A Brief Overview. Periodicum biologorum, 123(1-2): 1-5
https://hrcak.srce.hr/ojs/index.php/periodicum_biologorum/article/download/15413/12021
Effects of feeding enrichment on captive African Elephant
Loxodonta africana
Driscoll, Caroline Marie, "The Behavioral Effects of Feeding Enrichment on a Zoo-Housed Herd of African Elephants (Loxodonta africana)" (2017). Graduate Theses. 71.
https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/graduatetheses/71
American Flamingo
Phoenicopterus ruber ruber
Hughes, A. L. and Driscoll C. 2014. Being in the Thick of Things: Context- Dependent Network Centrality in a Captive Flock of American Flamingos. Journal of Ethology 32: 83-90.
Hughes, A. L., Cauthen, J. and Driscoll, C. 2014. Testing for behavioral lateralization in observational data: A Monte Carlo approach applied to neck-looping in American flamingos. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology, 126: 345-352
Hughes A.L., Raynes A., Driscoll C., Babbler J. 2013. Behavioral Correlates of Post‐Breeding Weight Change in a Captive Flock of American Flamingos (Phoenicopterus ruber ruber). Zoo Biology 32: 204- 209.
Contact Me
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