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Giving Birth to Empathy: The Effects of Similar Experience on Empathic Accuracy, Empathic Concern, and Perceived Empathy
Sara D. Hodges, Dr.*,
Kristi J. Kiel,
Adam D. I. Kramer,
Darya Veach,
and
B. Renee Villanueva
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sdhodges{at}uoregon.edu.
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Abstract |
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This study examined how having had a similar experience to a target persons experience affected three facets of empathy: empathic concern, empathic accuracy, and perceived empathy. Women who had never been mothers, who were pregnant with their first child, or who had just given birth to their first child (20 in each group) served as perceivers, watching videotapes of new-mother targets (N = 20) and providing measures of emotional and cognitive empathy. When perceivers had experienced the same life events as the targets, they expressed greater empathic concern and reported greater understanding of targets. However, experience had a much smaller effect on empathic accuracy, limited to comparisons between new-mother and never-pregnant perceivers and only for accuracy at guessing stereotypic attitudes, not individual thoughts. Perceived empathy, in contrast, appeared to be influenced by targets knowledge of whether perceivers had experienced similar events.
First published on October 29, 2009 Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 2009, doi:10.1177/0146167209350326

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