Klara, the Empathic Android
Most science-fiction stories purportedly about robots are actually about human nature. If this is true, then what does Klara teach us about ourselves?
ܰ’s Klara and the Sun touches on many aspects of our psyche, but let's focus on empathy. Empathy is the ability to detect, understand, and often feel the emotions of another organism. It’s astonishing, and I’d love to understand how our brain manages it1.
Klara is an especially perceptive – and I’d argue, empathic – Artificial Friend. She appears deeply invested in understanding the complex intricacies of human emotion, and her empathy eventually compels her to engage in a remarkable act of altruistic self-sacrifice.But is Klara’s empathy “authentic”? She’s been programmed to serve as a faithful companion. Is the value of her altruistic behavior diminished by its origin?
I hope not! After all, I’d argue that empathy and altruism have also been “programmed” into human beings – by natural selection. Evolutionary biologists have identified numerous reproductive benefits that organisms garner when engaging in altruism2. These biological predispositions don’t diminish the moral value of good behavior. What they suggest is that empathy is a core aspect of the human experience and has contributed to our impressive capacity for socialization and, arguably, the evolution of civilization itself.
Which is not to say that empathy is a uniquely human trait. In my research laboratory at Skidmore, I study empathy and altruism…in rats! A rat will help another in trouble, even if there’s no explicit reward for doing so3. This altruism is driven primarily by “emotional contagion,” in which the empathic rat “catches” distress and is motivated to help to reduce their own negative feelings4.
To be clear, the reason I study rats is not because I’m especially interested in them. I want to understand how human empathy works, especially its neurobiological roots, and rats are a useful scientific tool. I’m curious to know how Klara’s creators imbued her with such a strong empathic instinct. Was she programmed with a capacity for emotional contagion? She clearly excels at mimicry; does this help her feel what Josie feels? And how much longer will it be before our AI assistants are programmed with the capacity to read human emotions and experience a primitive form of empathy?
[1] You’ve maybe heard of “mirror neurons”? They help us feel what another person is feeling and are part of a broader network of brain regions that generate empathy. For some advanced reading, check out: Iacoboni, M. (2009). Imitation, empathy, and mirror neurons. Annual Review of Psychology, 60, 653-670.
[2] Hamilton, W. D. (1963). The evolution of altruistic behavior. The American Naturalist, 97(896), 354-356.
[3] My current research is largely based off the stellar work of Dr. Peggy Mason. You can watch a great short video summary of her ‘trapped rat’ model here:
[4] Interestingly, if you reduce the empathic-distress of the free rat by giving them a drug that reduces anxiety (an “anxiolytic”), they become significantly less likely to help their trapped partner. What does this say about a society in which so many of its citizens are taking anxiolytics on a regular basis? Does taking an anxiety-medication make you less likely to help others in need?
Human or AI?
Hassan H. Lopez
Professor, Department of Psychology & Neuroscience Program