Peering into the brains of political extremists
Interview with
The fatal stabbing of three young girls at a Taylor Swift dance class in the seaside town of Southport in the North of England has prompted some of the worst unrest the UK has seen in more than a decade. The violence, in towns and cities across England and in Northern Ireland, was fuelled, in part, by online misinformation, and was perpetrated largely by far-right and anti-immigrant groups. But what exactly causes extremism in the first place?
Leor Zmigrod is a researcher who explores the complex biological and environmental factors which contribute to why some people hold extreme views. A ‘political neuroscientist’, she explores these themes in her upcoming book ‘The Ideological Brain.’ I caught up with her to discuss her work, putting it in the context of recent events…
Leor - One of the challenges that we have when we think about extremism is we're very dependent on people's words and people's reports. That's usually how scientists or social scientists measure what makes people likely to hold extremist views, it's by asking them to tell us what they feel, why they feel it. But what neuroscience can offer us is the chance to explore what they don't tell us, what they can't tell us about themselves, the kind of cognitive processes that are taking place maybe while they're thinking about their ideologies or while they're not thinking about politics at all, but can give us a sense of how they approach the world, how their brains process information stimuli. Through that we can get an insight into these invisible processes that we wouldn't be able to tell with other methods.
James - We're talking in the wake of some civil unrest in the UK that's been perpetrated by right wing political movements. Is what you're going to tell me about the characteristics of extremist brains applicable across the spectrum?
Leor - What we're finding when we're looking at the traits that make people susceptible to holding extremist views is that there are some traits that predict what might predispose someone to any extremist ideology regardless of its mission. Those can include factors like people's cognitive rigidity, that's how inflexibly they process information about the world. We test that by looking at how adaptably they behave in response to changing environments or changing rules. We can give them neuropsychological tasks that measure how well they adapt when the rules of the game change and we see, across a huge set of ideological persuasions, that people who are more cognitively rigid tend to hold ideological views more extremely: they're more willing to endorse violence in the name of their ideology regardless of what it is. There are also traits that predispose someone more towards a conservative view, a more liberal view, or different kinds of ideologies. There are traits that also affect the tilt of whether you're leaning to the left or to the right.
James - Interesting. Let's stick for now with those traits that are more applicable across the board. Rigidity you mentioned, what other traits are part of the broader picture here of extremism?
Leor - Cognitive rigidity is one factor that we see when we look at how people reason and make decisions, but we can also look at their emotions. What we find is that people who tend to endorse violence in support of their ideology tend to actually be quite emotionally dysregulated. They tend to be more impulsive in their decisions, they tend to be more seeking of thrills and sensations that are new to them. When we measure this, we're not looking at their political emotions, we're looking just at their emotional habits in everyday life. Someone who tends to generally be more emotionally impulsive, seeking those thrills, also tends to search for them in the political realm.
James - Risk taking, thrill seeking, impulsivity. These are things we might associate more with men?
Leor - We find that men are more likely to endorse violence in the name of their ideological group, so they hold more violent extremist group views in general. Whether that's mediated through differences in risk taking, I don't know if we have evidence for that, but there is a gender component.
James - How powerful are psychological factors related to collective action and group think in extremism?
Leor - Studies that have looked at what motivates people who have been convicted for ideologically driven crimes or terrorist acts in the US, whether those are for the far left, far right or Islamist ideologies, all of them are united by the fact that in their recent history they'd experienced some kind of isolation or alienation or they'd been rejected, whether that's romantically, financially they'd had some kind of trouble; and so we do see that the way in which people experience their private lives leaks into their collective action decisions very, very strongly. Sometimes those psychological factors are stronger predictors than demographic factors that we might think of such as age, education level, gender, which is why we need a psychological lens on this rather than just breaking things down according to demographics.
James - Another very pertinent feature of recent extremist riots and so on has been the social media component. Is the way those platforms are designed, does they facilitate the extremist brain?
Leor - When we look at the way that social media platforms are designed, those algorithms that facilitate the circulation of information, we see that the information that gets most circulated is emotionally dysregulating information, either incredibly positive or incredibly negative. That facilitates this very bizarre and scary situation in which the most vulnerable minds psychologically, when they encounter misinformation online, are likely to encounter the kind of misinformation that is most likely to trigger them towards extremist thinking and rigid thinking. That's why we have to think very carefully about how our social media platforms and how information is propagated when we're thinking about the intersection between vulnerability and technology.
James - How does your work, your research into understanding cognitive rigidity, emotional dysregulation, etc., these extremist traits, lead us to be able to reduce the harms perpetrated by extremist ideologies?
Leor - Through this research, we're also learning about the kind of characteristics that make people resilient in the face of misinformation, in the face of dogmatic ways of thinking. What we're learning is about the value of flexibility, of emotional resilience, and to think about how we can nudge people or help those traits get expressed in people who are more vulnerable. In many ways, although this is a cognitive psychological, somewhat biological lens, it does not assume that things are fixed. People can and do change their levels of flexibility, of openness, and that's what we as a society need to think about: well, how do we open people up so that they can evaluate information in the most flexible, balanced, evidence accepting way?
Comments
Add a comment