A Brief Acting Experience Fosters Empathic Concern

Acting is closely related to theory of mind and empathy, which are fundamental abilities to maintain interpersonal relationships and facilitate cooperation among people. Acting experience intervention is known as one instrument to foster theory of mind and empathy; however, empirical evidence on th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keiko Ishii, Tomomi Kanda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Rijeka 2022-04-01
Series:Psychological Topics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pt.ffri.hr/pt/article/view/801
Description
Summary:Acting is closely related to theory of mind and empathy, which are fundamental abilities to maintain interpersonal relationships and facilitate cooperation among people. Acting experience intervention is known as one instrument to foster theory of mind and empathy; however, empirical evidence on the effects of brief acting experience in a laboratory setting remains scarce. To obtain further evidence to support the effects, we assigned 47 Japanese participants randomly to either an acting condition where they experienced a play in a group of three people in a 60 minute session or a control condition and measured their levels of theory of mind and empathy three times (one day before the intervention, soon after the intervention, and a week after the intervention). As expected, brief acting experience improved the level of empathic concern. However, no effect of acting was found in theory of mind and the other facets of empathy. Implications for future work in applied settings are discussed.
ISSN:1332-0742
1849-0395