Futurity

Instead of social distancing, try distant socializing

As you stay at home to help with social distancing to fight COVID-19's spread, you need to try to keep in touch with friends and family, an expert says.
A woman with red hair smiles and waves into her phone camera while using Facetime

The same technologies that people once blamed for tearing society apart might be our best chance of staying together during the COVID-19 outbreak, an expert argues.

Social distancing—voluntarily limiting physical contact with other people—has been vital to help slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.

It’s important that people remain connected during social distancing, however, otherwise a long-term mental and physical health crisis might follow the viral one, says Jamil Zaki, an associate professor of psychology at Stanford University’s and director of the Stanford Social Neuroscience Laboratory and author of The War for Kindness: Building Empathy in a Fractured World (Penguin-Random House, 2019).

Zaki’s research examines how empathy works and how people can learn to empathize more effectively.

Here, he discusses strategies to stay connected, starting with the reframing of “social distancing” to “physical distancing” to highlight how people can remain together even while being apart:

The post Instead of social distancing, try distant socializing appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Did A Weak Magnetic Field Lead To Life On Earth?
Evidence suggests a weak magnetic field millions of years ago may have fueled the proliferation of life on Earth. The Ediacaran Period, spanning from about 635 to 541 million years ago, was a pivotal time in Earth’s history. It marked a transformativ
Futurity3 min read
Common Antibiotic Tied To Higher Death Risk In Sickest Patients
Decisions about which antibiotics to give a patient when a life-threatening infection is suspected may have unintended consequences for patient outcomes, a new study reveals. Beginning in 2015, a 15-month national shortage of a commonly prescribed an
Futurity4 min read
Can Citations Fight Misinformation On YouTube?
Researchers have created and tested a prototype browser extension called Viblio that lets viewers and creators add Wikipedia-like citations to YouTube videos. While Google has long been synonymous with search, people are increasingly seeking informat

Related Books & Audiobooks