An additional antecedent of empathic concern: valuing the welfare of the person in need.

C Daniel Batson, Jakob Håansson Eklund, Valerie L Chermok, Jennifer L Hoyt, Biaggio G Ortiz
Author Information
  1. C Daniel Batson: Department of Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045-2160, USA. dbatson@ku.edu

Abstract

Two experiments examined the role of valuing the welfare of a person in need as an antecedent of empathic concern. Specifically, these experiments explored the relation of such valuing to a well-known antecedent--perspective taking. In Experiment 1, both perspective taking and valuing were manipulated, and each independently increased empathic concern, which, in turn, increased helping behavior. In Experiment 2, only valuing was manipulated. Manipulated valuing increased measured perspective taking and, in part as a result, increased empathic concern, which, in turn, increased helping. Valuing appears to be an important, largely overlooked, situational antecedent of feeling empathy for a person in need.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Altruism
Empathy
Female
Helping Behavior
Humans
Imagination
Interpersonal Relations
Male
Personal Construct Theory
Reality Testing
Social Perception
Social Values

Word Cloud

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