Tania Singer


Tania Singer is a German psychologist and social neuroscientist and is scientific head of the Social Neuroscience Lab of the Max Planck Society in Berlin, Germany. Between 2007 and 2010, she was Inaugural Chair of Social Neuroscience and Neuroeconomics and Co-Director of the in Zürich. Her research focuses on the developmental, neuronal, and hormonal mechanisms underlying human social behavior and social emotions such as compassion and empathy. She is founder and principal investigator of the project, one of the largest longitudinal studies on the effects of mental training on brain plasticity as well as mental and physical health, co-funded by the European Research Council. She further holds a cooperation with the macro-economist Dennis Snower on the topic of Caring Economics. Singer's Caring Economics: Conversations on Altruism and Compassion, Between Scientists, Economists, and the Dalai Lama was published in 2015. She is the daughter of the neuroscientist Wolf Singer.

Education and academic career

Singer studied psychology at the Philipps University of Marburg from 1989 to 1992. From 1992 to 1996 she studied psychology, media psychology and media counseling at the Technical University of Berlin, graduating with a M.S. in 1996. She was a predoctoral fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin and received her Ph.D. from the Free University of Berlin in 2000, for which she was awarded the Otto Hahn Medal of the Max Planck Society. She then continued to work at the Max Planck Institute as a research scientist at the Center for Lifespan Psychology until 2002.
After a period at the Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience and then at the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience in London, UK, she moved to the University of Zurich, Switzerland, as an assistant professor in 2006. From 2007 to 2009, she was co-director of the Laboratory for Social and Neural Systems Research and in 2008 was appointed to the Inaugural Chair of Social Neuroscience and Neuroeconomics at the University of Zurich. In 2010 she became Director at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig, Germany. Between 2011 and 2019, she held honorary professorships at the University of Leipzig and the Humboldt University, Berlin. She is also an honorary research fellow at the Laboratory for Social and Neural Systems Research at the University of Zurich as well as honorary board member of Mind and Life Europe. In 2019, she moved to Berlin as Scientific Head of the Social Neuroscience Lab.

Research

Singer's work focuses on social cognition, social moral emotions such as empathy, compassion, envy and fairness, social decision making, and communication. She is interested in the determinants of cooperation and prosocial behavior as well as the breakdown of cooperation and the emergence of selfish behavior. Her research uses a range of methods including functional magnetic resonance imaging, virtual reality environments, biological markers such as cortisol, and behavioral studies.
Singer was board member at the Mind and Life Institute as well as vice president and is now honorary board member of Mind and Life Europe. In that context, she has worked with the French Buddhist monk Matthieu Ricard to investigate brain activity during meditation. Together, they helped organize two large-scale Mind and Life Conferences with the Dalai Lama in 2010 in Zürich and again in 2016 in Brussels. Two books resulted from these two conferences:Caring Economics and Power and Care. Furthermore, Singer is author of more than 150 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters.
Singer founded and is principal investigator of the ReSource Project, a large-scale one-year longitudinal mental training study co-funded by the European Research Council since 2008. This project investigates with a longitudinal design the long-term effects of different types of mental training ranging from practices based on mindfulness, compassion and perspective taking on well-being, brain plasticity, prosocial behavior, stress reduction, and health in more than 300 participants using 90 different measures. Until now more than 30 scientific papers have been published based on the data that have been assessed between 2013 and 2016. Results show for example that mental training reduces social stress and has effects on changes in structural brain plasticity.
Another research focus is on how social cognition and motivations can explain human social interaction and human economic decision making. The new research program on Caring Economics, co-funded by the Institute for New Economic Thinking between 2013 and 2017, in cooperation with Professor Dennis J. Snower, former president of the Kiel Institute of World Economy, explores new avenues of how psychological and neuroscientific knowledge about human motivation, emotion, and social cognition can inform models of economic decision making in addressing global economic problems.
In a paper published in the journal Science in 2004, Singer showed that some pain-sensitive regions of the brain were also activated when volunteers experienced their partners feeling pain. In follow-up studies, published in the journals Nature and Neuron, she showed that empathy-related brain responses are influenced by the perceived fairness of others, and whether a target belonged to an ingroup or outgroup, respectively.
Based on earlier studies she did with Buddhist Monk Matthieu Ricard, she further showed that the neural circuits underlying empathic responses to the suffering of others are different from the neural networks underlying compassion. Whereas empathy is associated with negative emotions and can lead to burn-out if turning into empathic distress, compassion comes with positive feelings of care and warmth and can boost resilience in the face of suffering.
Singer has also a long-standing interest in the cooperation between arts and science and for example worked together with the artist Olafur Eliasson in bringing about a multi-media, free-downloadable E-book .

Controversy

In August 2018 Science Magazine reported that Singer bullied many of her employees. Difficulties were brought up by team members during a meeting with the scientific advisory board in February 2017 as a part of the institute official evaluation. An internal investigation later confirmed the accusations raised by her former employees of bullying behavior, mistreatment of pregnant employees and also of significant failures in leadership. The press release of the Max Planck Society acknowledged that partial anonymity of the accusations was not lifted which “made it more difficult for the director to respond to the allegations". However, employees' names were known to the internal commission and evidence of bullying was brought for review to the investigation committee as well. They did not find evidence for scientific misconduct. In order to avoid a further escalation of the situation, Singer resigned from her director position in agreement with the Max Planck Society. She is now Professor and scientific Head of the of the Max Planck Society in Berlin.

Awards and selected memberships

A complete publication list of Tania Singer can be found on her website.