The Empathic Process and Its Mediators
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease
- Vol. 178 (10) , 649-654
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005053-199010000-00006
Abstract
Clinical empathy research has been plagued with conceptual and methodological difficulties. This paper describes a model of the empathic process that enables clinicians, teachers, and researchers to examine specific components of the model and to determine the influence of particular mediators on the empathic process. Empathy is conceptualized as a three-phase time-sequenced process rather than as a multidimensional or multicomponent phenomenon. Stripped of detail, the empathic process reveals an inducement phase, a matching phase, and a participatory-helping phase. By examining these phases, it becomes possible to distinguish empathy from closely related concepts such as sympathy. Each of the phases reveals numerous mediating variables that influence the outcome of the phase, i.e., whether the process of empathy continues or an alternate terminal point is reached. Many of these mediators are derived from existing conceptual and empirical work on empathy. Particular attention is paid to situational or contextual mediators of empathy. Contextual mediators have only recently been acknowledged as an important variable in the empathic process. For clinicians, identification of contextual variables that may be responsive to intervention is a critical step in the modification of the clinical environment. We would suggest that clinical empathy research is largely the study of these mediating influences and should be recognized as such.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The necessary and sufficient conditions of therapeutic personality change.Psychotherapy, 2007
- Empathic concern and helping behavior: Egoism or altruism?Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1988
- Levels of emotional awareness: a cognitive-developmental theory and its application to psychopathology [published erratum appears in Am J Psychiatry 1987 Apr;144(4):542]American Journal of Psychiatry, 1987
- Emotional responses to affective displays in others: The distinction between empathy and sympathy.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
- The distinction between sympathy and empathy: To call forth a concept, a word is needed.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
- Understanding empathy: Integrating counseling, developmental, and social psychology perspectives.Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1983
- Measuring individual differences in empathy: Evidence for a multidimensional approach.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1983
- Sex Differences in Empathy and Social Behavior in ChildrenPublished by Elsevier ,1982
- Sex differences in empathy and related behaviors.Psychological Bulletin, 1977
- Toward an interactional psychology of personality.Psychological Bulletin, 1976