Conceptualizing and measuring affective and cognitive empathy: Physiological bases of discrete emotion communication, reason, and involvement in decision making

Ross Buck, Zhan Xu

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Individual differences in the ability to recognize emotion displays relate strongly to emotional intelligence, and emotional and social competence. However, there is a difference between the ability to judge the emotions of another person (i.e., emotional empathy) and the ability to take the perspective of another person, including making accurate appraisals, attributions, and inferences about the mental states of others (i.e., cognitive empathy). In this chapter, we review the concept of emotional empathy and the current state of the field, including emerging and converging evidence from neuroscience research that emotional and cognitive empathy involve doubly dissociable brain systems. We also discuss emerging literature on the physiological mechanisms underlying empathy in the peripheral and central nervous systems. We then distinguish spontaneous and symbolic communication processes to show how cognitive empathy emerges from emotional empathy during development. Development starts with the prelinguistic mutual contingent responsiveness of infant and caregiver yielding “raw” primary intersubjectivity, then secondary and tertiary intersubjectivity advances with increasing social experience, and finally cognitive empathic abilities expand in perspective taking and Theory of Mind (ToM) skills. We then present an Affect-Reason-Involvement (ARI) model to guide the conceptualization and measurement of emotional and cognitive empathy. We consider emotion correlation scores as a flexible and valid approach to empathy measurement, with implications for understanding the role of discrete emotions in decision making. Finally, we apply this reasoning to recent studies of the role of emotion and empathy in bullying.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationThe Oxford Handbook of the Physiology of Interpersonal Communication
PublisherOxford University Press
Pages9-30
Number of pages22
ISBN (Electronic)9780190679446
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2020

Keywords

  • ARI model
  • Cognitive empathy
  • Emotional empathy
  • Intersubjectivity
  • Spontaneous communication

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Psychology

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