“…Thus, empathy was expected to lead to helping behavior, whereas personal distress was expected to lead to avoidance behaviorpeople are motivated to leave the scene of a victim suffering without helping. As for empathy, a large body of research has shown that empathy promotes benevolent behavior (Allred and Amos, 2018;Ashar et al, 2016Ashar et al, , 2017Batson et al, 1983Batson et al, , 1987Batson et al, , 1988Bekkers, 2006;Fultz et al, 1986;Lee et al, 2014;Toi and Batson, 1982;Zhou et al, 2011). In contrast, the findings for personal distress were mixed: some studies have found that personal distress decreased helping behavior (Batson et al, 1981(Batson et al, , 1983(Batson et al, , 1986Toi and Batson, 1982), whereas others have found that personal distress increased helping behavior (Ashar et al, 2016(Ashar et al, , 2017.…”