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The potential and limitations of empathy in changing health-relevant affect, cognition and behaviour

Claudia Sassenrath, Svenja Diefenbacher, Stefan Pfattheicher, Johannes Keller

2021European Review of Social Psychology11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Global challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic or the impending climate change require each and every one of us to perform long-term self-restrictive behaviours, implying personal costs, for the sake of vulnerable others and future generations. We argue that empathy – conceptualised as other-oriented moral emotional process – can impact how we think, feel and act towards others in times of such disruptive global developments. Our research highlights how and under which circumstances empathy fosters solidarity with others in need. We review our findings which corroborate empathy’s potential in directly changing health-relevant behaviour (such as hand hygiene behaviour or adherence to COVID-19 pre-emptive measures) and as well as pro-environmental actions, which serve to protect others’ well-being through self-discipline and self-restriction. Furthermore, we also review and discuss research which indicates potential boundary conditions of empathy-induced prosocial responses to the plight of vulnerable individuals.

Topics & Concepts

Affect (linguistics)EmpathyPsychologyCognitionSocial psychologyCognitive psychologyDevelopmental psychologyCommunicationPsychiatryEmpathy and Medical EducationPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentBehavioral Health and Interventions
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