Motor, affective and cognitive empathy in adolescence: Interrelations between facial electromyography and self-reported trait and state measures

Jolien Van der Graaff*, W Meeus, Minet de Wied, Anton van Boxtel, Pol A C van Lier, Hans M. Koot, Susan Branje

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This study examined interrelations of trait and state empathy in an adolescent sample. Self-reported affective trait empathy and cognitive trait empathy were assessed during a home visit. During a test session at the university, motor empathy (facial electromyography), and self-reported affective and cognitive state empathy were assessed in response to empathy-inducing film clips portraying happiness and sadness. Adolescents who responded with stronger motor empathy consistently reported higher affective state empathy. Adolescents' motor empathy was also positively related to cognitive state empathy, either directly or indirectly via affective state empathy. Whereas trait empathy was consistently, but modestly, related to state empathy with sadness, for state empathy with happiness few trait–state associations were found. Together, the findings provide support for the notion that empathy is a multi-faceted phenomenon. Motor, affective and cognitive empathy seem to be related processes, each playing a different role in the ability to understand and share others' feelings.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)745-761
JournalCognition & Emotion
Volume30
Early online date31 Mar 2015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Keywords

  • Emotion
  • Facial EMG
  • Motor mimicry
  • State empathy
  • Trait empathy

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