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Posts by Razieh Pourafshari

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Iran protests live: Tehran threatens protesters with death penalty as casualties rise A human rights group says at least 65 people have been killed since demonstrations began on 28 December

Iran protests latest: Tehran threatens protesters with death penalty as casualties climb

3 months ago 14 7 0 0
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And despite it all, this is Tehran 🇮🇷

3 months ago 7870 2106 125 94

I feel understood! (they were just more handsome in my imagination when I was reading the book...)

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
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🧵 1/
🚨 New paper out in PLOS ONE! w/ @caropradier.bsky.social @benzpierre.bsky.social @natsush.bsky.social @ipoga.bsky.social @lariviev.bsky.social
We studied 43k authors and 264k citation links in U.S. economics to ask:
👉 Why do some papers cite others?
🔗 journals.plos.org/plosone/arti...

5 months ago 33 23 1 3

Abstract

When we empathize with someone going through something, we often draw on our past experiences with the someone and the something. These kinds of experiences ground "thick empathy", a form of empathy that has been largely overlooked in the psychology and neuroscience literature. Consider how a mother, empathizing with her daughter about to give birth, can draw on her own experience of childbirth, and her relationship with her daughter, to deeply grasp what her daughter is going through in a way that others who lack those experiences cannot. I argue that thick empathy deserves more empirical attention because it is associated with well-being and helps us build networks of effective mutual social support. My analysis highlights novel risks and dilemmas posed by "empathy machines" that promise to enhance or even replace human empathy and are becoming increasingly popular as a potential solution to widespread loneliness. Even when empathy machines provide value to individuals, their widespread adoption risks imposing collective emotional and epistemic costs that ultimately make it harder for us to empathize well.

Keywords: empathy, understanding, experience, thick description, ethnography, phenomenal knowledge, interpersonal knowledge, virtual reality, artificial intelligence, chatbots

Abstract When we empathize with someone going through something, we often draw on our past experiences with the someone and the something. These kinds of experiences ground "thick empathy", a form of empathy that has been largely overlooked in the psychology and neuroscience literature. Consider how a mother, empathizing with her daughter about to give birth, can draw on her own experience of childbirth, and her relationship with her daughter, to deeply grasp what her daughter is going through in a way that others who lack those experiences cannot. I argue that thick empathy deserves more empirical attention because it is associated with well-being and helps us build networks of effective mutual social support. My analysis highlights novel risks and dilemmas posed by "empathy machines" that promise to enhance or even replace human empathy and are becoming increasingly popular as a potential solution to widespread loneliness. Even when empathy machines provide value to individuals, their widespread adoption risks imposing collective emotional and epistemic costs that ultimately make it harder for us to empathize well. Keywords: empathy, understanding, experience, thick description, ethnography, phenomenal knowledge, interpersonal knowledge, virtual reality, artificial intelligence, chatbots

New preprint: Empathy, Thick and Thin
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....

It is perhaps foolhardy to attempt to say something new about a topic as widely studied as empathy. I tried anyway! 1/

4 months ago 252 66 12 11

I have been thinking about this all day...this is scary...

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
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You may be scrolling through Instagram out of habit and not addiction Almost half of teenagers in Britain say they feel addicted to social media

Cool to see our newest work on social media covered by @the-independent.com! www.independent.co.uk/news/health/...

4 months ago 8 1 1 0
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The number of times I heard you presenting this study! 🥲 and still can't wait to read this paper! congratulations!

4 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Smartphone habits are stronger in spaces chosen out of habit Scientific Reports - Smartphone habits are stronger in spaces chosen out of habit

STOKED that our paper on smartphone and spatial habits is out in Scientific Reports! 🎉

Using mobility 🏃 and app 📱 data (27,446,977 logs; 7,226 trip questionnaires) we found that smartphone habits are stronger in habitually traveled and visited spaces 🏡

Personal thread below!

rdcu.be/eQ7q0

5 months ago 22 6 1 0

Woooooooooo 👏 Congratulations 🎊

5 months ago 1 0 0 0

The BEST part of my summer! ☀️💙

8 months ago 3 0 1 0

so this paper from my friend @sakshi-bhalla.bsky.social feels so spot on when she told me about it this morning! Such a thoughtful look at how Illinois’ media literacy mandate plays out in real classrooms!

8 months ago 1 0 1 0

One of the things I keep thinking about—even two months after ICA Mobile Preconference—is our workshop on digital disconnection policies. We had to think about kids’ education, ages, and contexts—and we kept circling back to the role of "teachers" who would actually deliver those policies!

8 months ago 7 1 1 0
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LOVING @mqrmobile.bsky.social and @joebayer.bsky.social 's Mobile Top Paper on theorizing affordances of connectivity!
@icamobile.bsky.social

10 months ago 10 4 0 0
The four conceptualizations of social connection Nature Reviews Psychology - The term ‘social connection’ is operationalized differently across disparate strands of research. In this Review, Baek et al. highlight four distinct uses of...

Wrapping up #ica25 with @rzhprfshr.bsky.social presenting our work with @joebayer.bsky.social reviewing the research under the broad umbrella of “social connection”. And perfect timing because the paper was published TODAY at @natrevpsychol.nature.com 🥳 rdcu.be/erayE

10 months ago 38 16 1 0
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Setting up a Qualtrics workflow to send daily survey links via text message to participants in a contact directory

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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The tradeoff of solitude? Restoration and relatedness across shades of solitude Social interaction and solitude entail tradeoffs. Communicate Bond Belong (CBB) theory holds that social interaction can foster relatedness with others at the cost of social energy, whereas solitude c...

Excited to share my latest on solitude in @plosone.bsky.social! With Scott Campbell, I leveraged communicate bond belong theory to investigate how different shades of solitude 🚣 balance energy restoration 🔋 and relatedness with others 🫂 for well-being 🙂: doi.org/10.1371/jour...

1 year ago 8 2 1 0