Exploratory Investigations of Empathy1

Publisher Summary It is possible for one person to experience an emotion when he or she perceives that another person is experiencing an emotion. The relationship between action and the sharing of feelings is obviously not a simple or direct one. It is possible to study so subtle and important a phenomenon as empathy in the laboratory and to examine some of the determinants of empathy. The process leading to empathy can be understood in terms of cognitive variables such as the mental set that the person has when he or she observes the other. The form or type of social relationships between one person and another influences the amount of empathy, presumably because the form of the social relationship influences the manner of perceiving the other and thinking about him or her. Individual differences in reactions to social situations, in perceiving the other, and in thinking about him or her must be considered in predicting how much empathizing will occur. These individual differences appear to be determined in part by the birth order of the person.

[1]  S. Escalona Feeding disturbances in very young children. , 1945 .

[2]  J. A. Walsh,et al.  Birth order and an experimental study of empathy. , 1963, Journal of abnormal and social psychology.

[3]  J. Lacey,et al.  Individual differences in somatic response patterns. , 1950, Journal of comparative and physiological psychology.

[4]  Seymour M. Berger,et al.  Conditioning through vicarious instigation. , 1962 .

[5]  W. D. Winter,et al.  The Palmar Sweat Print: A Methodological Study , 1963, Psychosomatic medicine.

[6]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  Effects of perceived dependency relationships upon conformity to group expectations. , 1957, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[7]  W. D. Winter,et al.  TWO MEASURES OF ANXIETY: A VALIDATION. , 1963, Journal of consulting psychology.

[8]  E. Stotland,et al.  Similarity of performance as influenced by interaction, self-esteem, and birth order. , 1962, Journal of abnormal and social psychology.

[9]  B. Ackner Emotions and the peripheral vasomotor system; a review of previous work. , 1956, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[10]  Sampson Ee The study of ordinal position: antecedents and outcomes. , 1965 .

[11]  J. P. Nafe,et al.  The Effect of Pain upon Peripheral Blood Volume , 1938 .

[12]  L. Cronbach Processes affecting scores on understanding of others and assumed similarity. , 1955, Psychological bulletin.

[13]  Leonard Berkowitz,et al.  Responsibility and dependency. , 1963 .

[14]  J. Bruner On perceptual readiness. , 1957, Psychological review.

[15]  A. Ax The Physiological Differentiation between Fear and Anger in Humans , 1953, Psychosomatic medicine.

[16]  E. Carmichael,et al.  VASOMOTOR RESPONSES IN HEMIPLEGIC PATIENTS , 1935 .

[17]  R. H. Davis A further study of the effect of stress on palmar prints. , 1957, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[18]  A. Riesen,et al.  Magnitude of Galvanic and Vasomotor Response as a Function of Stimulus Intensity , 1940 .

[19]  J. Beam Serial learning and conditioning under real-life stress. , 1955, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[20]  R. Davis,et al.  Autonomic and muscular responses, and their relation to simple stimuli. , 1955 .

[21]  R. E. Dunn,et al.  Identification, "oppositeness," authoritarianism, self-esteem, and birth order. , 1962 .

[22]  L. Berkowitz,et al.  AFFECTING THE SALIENCE OF THE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY NORM: EFFECTS OF PAST HELP ON THE RESPONSE TO DEPENDENCY RELATIONSHIPS. , 1964, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[23]  W. H. Teichner DELAYED COLD-INDUCED VASODILATATION AND BEHAVIOR. , 1965, Journal of experimental psychology.

[24]  R. Gladstone A Group Test of Palmar Sweat , 1953 .

[25]  R. E. Dunn,et al.  Empathy, self-esteem, and birth order. , 1963, Journal of abnormal and social psychology.

[26]  M. Hoffman,et al.  Parent discipline and the child's moral development. , 1967, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[27]  D. Marquis,et al.  THE CENTRAL PATHWAY IN MAN OF THE VASOMOTOR RESPONSE TO PAIN , 1938 .

[28]  J. Singer,et al.  Cognitive, social, and physiological determinants of emotional state. , 1962 .