4.3 Article

Age Differences in Empathy: Multidirectional and Context-Dependent

Journal

PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 407-419

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0039001

Keywords

empathic accuracy; sympathy; emotional congruence; adult life-span; age differences

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [KU 1267/6-1]

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This study investigated age differences in empathy, focusing on empathic accuracy (the ability to perceive another's emotions accurately), emotional congruence (the capacity to share another's emotions), and sympathy. Participants, 101 younger (M-age = 24 years) and 101 older (M-age = 69 years) women, viewed 6 film clips, each portraying a younger or an older woman reliving and thinking aloud about an autobiographical memory. The emotional quality (anger, sadness, happiness) and the age relevance (young, old) of the memorized events were systematically varied. In comparison to their younger counterparts, older women were less accurate in perceiving the protagonists' emotions, but they reported similar levels of emotional congruence and greater sympathy. In addition, age deficits in empathic accuracy were moderated by the age relevance of the task, that is, younger and older women's empathic accuracy did not differ if the protagonists' memorized personal experience was of high relevance to older adults. These findings speak for multidirectional and context-dependent age differences in empathy.

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