Arbitrary Groups Breed Ingroup Favoritism, Fueling Societal Divisions
Ingroup favoritism happens because people find it harder to tell apart those from different groups compared to their own. This makes them more likely to help their own group, even when there's no real reason to. Scientists used a model to show that when people think everyone outside their group is pretty much the same, they tend to help their own group more. But this bias can decrease when cooperation benefits are high, the population is more diverse, or the social rules are stricter.