TY - CHAP
T1 - Empathic Perspective Taking in Family Relationships: A Social Relations Analysis
AU - Paleari, F. Giorgia
AU - Paleari, Francesca Giorgia
AU - Tagliabue, Semira
AU - Lanz, Margherita
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Empathy has been found to facilitate a variety of prosocial phenomena that foster
healthy and satisfying family relationships. Experiencing empathy towards the spouse
positively predicts marital forgiveness, accommodation, support and adjustment whereas
parental empathy is positively associated with psychological well-being and adjustment
of children. Nonetheless, little research has explored the supposed pro-relationship effects
of parental, filial, or fraternal empathy, and in particular perspective taking, in intact non-
clinical families. The possibility that a more or less empathic climate may be present
within each family and may affect the family as a whole has been relatively neglected
too.
The present study addressed these shortcomings by investigating empathic
perspective taking and its link to social support within families (n= 108) with two young
adults. Data on perspective taking, collected from the four family members (father,
mother and two siblings), were first analyzed through the Social Relations Model to
disentangle the actor‘s, the partner‘s, the relationship‘s, and the family‘s contributions to
perspective taking. In view of the existing literature showing that perceived support can
be partitioned in different components (individual, relational, and group level) and that
each component explains different percentage of variance of perceived support, we
investigated the relation of the above contributions to perspective taking with the
different components of perceived support.
Results showed that empathic perspective taking towards family members was
mainly informed by the actor‘s individual characteristics and secondly by the
relationship‘s and family‘s ones. The two family effects for perspective taking
andsupport strongly correlated, indicating that families with an highly empathic climate
among its members perceived an highly supportive climate within them, and vice versa. The actor effects for perspective taking were correlated with the partner effects for
perceived support except for mothers, suggesting that the individual ability to understand
the other family members‘ perspective was significantly associated with the extent to
which the other family members perceived him/her as supportive. Finally, the
correlations between relationship effects in horizontal relationships were significant,
meaning that the more one family member uniquely understands another‘s perspective
the more the other uniquely perceives him/her as supportive and vice versa. Results have
been discussed within the existing literature.
AB - Empathy has been found to facilitate a variety of prosocial phenomena that foster
healthy and satisfying family relationships. Experiencing empathy towards the spouse
positively predicts marital forgiveness, accommodation, support and adjustment whereas
parental empathy is positively associated with psychological well-being and adjustment
of children. Nonetheless, little research has explored the supposed pro-relationship effects
of parental, filial, or fraternal empathy, and in particular perspective taking, in intact non-
clinical families. The possibility that a more or less empathic climate may be present
within each family and may affect the family as a whole has been relatively neglected
too.
The present study addressed these shortcomings by investigating empathic
perspective taking and its link to social support within families (n= 108) with two young
adults. Data on perspective taking, collected from the four family members (father,
mother and two siblings), were first analyzed through the Social Relations Model to
disentangle the actor‘s, the partner‘s, the relationship‘s, and the family‘s contributions to
perspective taking. In view of the existing literature showing that perceived support can
be partitioned in different components (individual, relational, and group level) and that
each component explains different percentage of variance of perceived support, we
investigated the relation of the above contributions to perspective taking with the
different components of perceived support.
Results showed that empathic perspective taking towards family members was
mainly informed by the actor‘s individual characteristics and secondly by the
relationship‘s and family‘s ones. The two family effects for perspective taking
andsupport strongly correlated, indicating that families with an highly empathic climate
among its members perceived an highly supportive climate within them, and vice versa. The actor effects for perspective taking were correlated with the partner effects for
perceived support except for mothers, suggesting that the individual ability to understand
the other family members‘ perspective was significantly associated with the extent to
which the other family members perceived him/her as supportive. Finally, the
correlations between relationship effects in horizontal relationships were significant,
meaning that the more one family member uniquely understands another‘s perspective
the more the other uniquely perceives him/her as supportive and vice versa. Results have
been discussed within the existing literature.
KW - Empathy
KW - Family
KW - Empathy
KW - Family
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/7902
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-1-61209-794-7
T3 - Psychology of Emotions, Motivations and Actions
SP - 185
EP - 202
BT - Psychology of Empathy
ER -