Learned helplessness occurs when an individual continuously faces a negative, uncontrollable situation and stops trying to change their circumstances, even when they have the ability to do so. For example, a smoker may repeatedly try and fail to quit. He may grow frustrated and come to believe that nothing he does will help, and therefore, he stops trying altogether. The perception that one cannot control the situation essentially elicits a passive response to the harm that is occurring.
The Research on Learned Helplessness
The term was coined in 1967 by the American psychologists Martin Seligman and Steven Maier. The pair was conducting research on animal behavior that involved delivering electric shocks to dogs. Dogs who learned that they couldn’t escape the shock stopped trying in subsequent experiments, even when it became possible to avoid the shock by jumping over a barrier. The researchers later realized they had picked up on a slightly different behavior, learning control, but studies have since confirmed that learned helplessness occurs.
Seligman later developed the concept of learned optimism : By explaining events to ourselves in a constructive manner and developing a positive internal dialogue, he theorized, people can break free from their cycle of helplessness.
In his research, Seligman subjected study participants to loud, unpleasant noises, using a lever that would or would not stop the sounds. The group whose lever wouldn’t stop the sound in the first round stopped trying to silence the noise subsequently. Seligman theorized that this act of not trying leads to apathy and powerlessness, which can in turn lead to all-or-nothing thinking: Nothing I do matters. I always lose. This phenomenon exists in many animal species as well as in humans—and in the latter, it exists across various contexts, from children who give up on school to adults who develop learned helplessness in the workplace.
A desire for control, even if well-intentioned, is a common way that parents undermine their children and foster learned helplessness. When parents do everything for their kids, they don't learn to take care of themselves and thus lose personal agency—for example, a parent who does their child's chores for them deprives the child of the opportunity to build the skill and develop a sense of their own competence. The concept may also manifest in educational settings when children feel they cannot perform well and therefore stop trying to improve. The experience is characterized by three main features: a passive response to trauma, not believing that trauma can be controlled, and stress .
Explore More About Learned Helplessness
For a comprehensive understanding of learned helplessness, read our complete guide: