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Journal Article

Citation

Silva C, Tsay CJ. J. Soc. Clin. Psychol. 2019; 38(9): 788-809.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Guilford Publications)

DOI

10.1521/jscp.2019.38.9.788

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Drawing from literature in social and clinical psychology, we explore mechanisms associated with the lack of empathy for people who engage in self-injurious behaviors.

METHODS: Using implicit and explicit measures across three samples, we tested whether knowledge of prior self-injury impacts observers' empathy, perceived agency, perspective taking, and willingness to help a target individual.

RESULTS: We found in Studies 1-2 that observers report decreased empathy, perceive less agency, and make more dispositional attributions toward a person who engages in deliberate self-injury, compared to accidental injury. Study 3 indicates that observers perceive a target who engaged in deliberate self-injury to have lower agency. Furthermore, when evaluating a target who has been victimized, observers report less empathy, compassion, and likelihood of helping if the target has a history of deliberate self-injury. Perceived agency accounted for decreased empathy, whereas empathy accounted for lower likelihood of helping.

DISCUSSION: Our findings imply that observers may be better able to empathize with people with a history of self-injury if they focus on the agency of the indi-vidual and situational causal explanations for the behavior.


Language: en

Keywords

agency; attribution; empathy; person perception; self-injury

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