4.5 Article

The Developmental Origins of a Disposition Toward Empathy: Genetic and Environmental Contributions

Journal

EMOTION
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 737-752

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0014179

Keywords

empathy; genetic versus environmental effects; prosocial behavior

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The authors investigated the development of a disposition toward empathy and its genetic and environmental origins. Young twins' (N = 409 pairs) cognitive (hypothesis testing) and affective (empathic concern) empathy and prosocial behavior in response to simulated pain by mothers and examiners were observed at Multiple time points. Children's mean level of empathy and prosociality increased front 14 to 36 months. Positive concurrent and longitudinal correlations indicated that empathy was a relatively stable disposition, generalizing across ages. across it affective and cognitive components, and across mother and examiner. Multivariate genetic analyses showed that genetic effects increased, and that shared environmental effects decreased, with age. Genetic effects contributed to both change and continuity in children's empathy, whereas shared environmental effects contributed to stability and nonshared envionmental effects contributed to change. Empathy was associated with prosocial behavior, and this relationship was mainly due to environmental effects.

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