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Psychology Today reports: In a study conducted in Milan, Italy, and published in November 2025, the sight of a person dressed as Batman led to a nearly doubled rate of people giving up their seat to a pregnant woman. Over the course of 138 subway rides, researchers found that people who saw "Batm...

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Learning about something in public, even if everyone already knows it, can change everything—especially when and how we decide to help.

Ps19
30 Jul 2025
web.archive.org
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Traditional compliance tools aren’t enough. Behavioral science can help.

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The bystander effect is a psychosocial theory that explores how the presence of bystanders mitigates our willingness to help.

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The bystander effect refers to a phenomenon in which the greater the number of people there are present, the less likely people are to help a person in distress. Learn why it happens.