Emotional empathy across adulthood: A meta-analytic review

Amy Jarvis, Stephanie Wong, Michael Weightman, Erica Ghezzi, Rhianna L.S. Sharman, Hannah A.D. Keage

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Emotional empathy is a congruent emotional response stemming from another’s emotional state and has mixed evidence for its association with age. We sought to synthesize existing data to investigate cross-sectional changes in emotional empathy across adulthood using random-effects meta-analyses. Embase, APA PsycInfo, Medline, and Scopus databases were systematically searched until October 2022. Thirty-three studies assessed age categorically by comparing older (M = 68.42, SD = 4.95) with younger (M = 27.55, SD = 6.82) adults and demonstrated higher emotional empathy in older adults (g = 0.10, p = .039). Seven studies examined age continuously (18–100 years), resulting in a positive correlation with age (zr = .08, p = .033). Subgroup analyses identified age effects differed based on the emotional empathy measure but not on measure type (state vs. trait) or gender ratio (73% women and 27% men). Cross-sectional results indicate emotional empathy may increase across adulthood. These results clarify the previously mixed reports of typical emotional empathy functioning in later life. Age effects varying due to the emotional empathy measure examined indicate that these measures’ convergent validity should be reexamined. Further research should employ older, population-based, non-western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic samples and longitudinal designs.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)126-138
Number of pages13
JournalPsychology and Aging
Volume39
Issue number2
Early online date16 Nov 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2024

Keywords

  • empathy
  • affective
  • social cognition
  • aging

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