학술논문

Situational assessment of empathy and compassion: Predicting prosociality using a video-based task
Document Type
Report
Source
PLoS ONE. December 7, 2023, Vol. 18 Issue 12, e0289465
Subject
Israel
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Classical psychometric approaches in social science measure individuals' tendency to experience empathy and compassion. Using abstract questionnaire items, they place high demand on subjects' capacity to introspect, memorize, and generalize the corresponding emotions. We employed a Socio-affective Video Task (SoVT)-an alternative approach that measures situationally elicited emotions-and assessed its predictive power over prosocial behavior against classical questionnaires in a sample of Israeli university students. We characterized the conceptual embedding of the SoVT concerning other measures of prosocial affect and cognition, and tested group identification as an alternative precursor to prosocial behavior. Eighty participants rated their reactions to videos that presented the suffering of others or everyday scenes on scales of negative affect (providing a proxy for elicited empathy) and compassion. We then administered classical questionnaires that target empathy (the Interpersonal Reactivity Index) and compassion (the Compassionate Love Scale), as well as measures of hypothetical and real-life helping and prosocial attitudes-including conflict attitudes and intergroup bias. While compassion ratings in the SoVT failed to predict prosociality more accurately than classical questionnaires, the SoVT empathy index succeeded and correlated strongly with other precursors of prosociality. These results support video-based situational assessment as an implicit and robust alternative in the measurement of empathy-related processes.
Author(s): Gabriela Górska 1,2,*, Aviva Berkovich-Ohana 3,4,5,6, Olga Klimecki 7,8, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein 3,9 Introduction At the core of the human ability to interact benevolently with others lie various socio-emotional and [...]