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Research Article
It Takes Two: The Interpersonal Nature of Empathic Accuracy
Jamil Zaki 1 , Niall Bolger 1 , and Kevin Ochsner 1
  1 Columbia University
 Address correspondence to Jamil Zaki or Kevin Ochsner, Department of Psychology, Columbia University, 406 Schermerhorn Hall, 1190 Amsterdam Ave., New York, NY 10027, e-mail: jamil@psych.columbia.edu or kochsner@psych.columbia.edu.
Copyright Copyright © 2008 Association for Psychological Science

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT—Although current theories suggest that affective empathy (perceivers' experience of social targets' emotions) should contribute to empathic accuracy (perceivers' ability to accurately assess targets' emotions), extant research has failed to consistently demonstrate a correspondence between them. We reasoned that prior null findings may be attributable to a failure to account for the fundamentally interpersonal nature of empathy, and tested the prediction that empathic accuracy may depend on both targets' tendency to express emotion and perceivers' tendency to empathically share that emotion. Using a continuous affect-rating paradigm, we found that perceivers' trait affective empathy was unrelated to empathic accuracy unless targets' trait expressivity was taken into account: Perceivers' trait affective empathy predicted accuracy only for expressive targets. These data suggest that perceivers' self-reported affective empathy can indeed predict their empathic accuracy, but only when targets' expressivity allows their thoughts and feelings to be read.


(Received 7/2/07; Revision accepted 10/2/07)

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02099.x About DOI

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