Empathy Development in Children
Empathy Development in Children
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Nicole M. McDonald
&
Daniel S. Messinger
University of Miami
Department of Psychology
can be defined as the ability to feel or imagine another person’s emotional experience. The
individual’s behavior toward others and the quality of social relationships. In this chapter, we
begin by describing the development of empathy in children as they move toward becoming
empathic adults. We then discuss biological and environmental processes that facilitate the
development of empathy. Next, we discuss important social outcomes associated with empathic
ability. Finally, we describe atypical empathy development, exploring the disorders of autism
and psychopathy in an attempt to learn about the consequences of not having an intact ability to
empathize.
Early theorists suggested that young children were too egocentric or otherwise not
cognitively able to experience empathy (Freud 1958; Piaget 1965). However, a multitude of
studies have provided evidence that very young children are, in fact, capable of displaying a
variety of rather sophisticated empathy related behaviors (Zahn-Waxler et al. 1979; Zahn-Waxler
et al. 1992a; Zahn-Waxler et al. 1992b). Measuring constructs such as empathy in very young
children does involve special challenges because of their limited verbal expressiveness.
Nevertheless, young children also present a special opportunity to measure constructs such as
empathy behaviorally, with less interference from concepts such as social desirability or
skepticism. One typical way of measuring empathy and its precursors in young children is to
examine their responses to another’s distress. Below we discuss the typical stages of empathy
development, beginning with newborns’ and infants’ distress reactions to another’s expressed
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distress, to empathic concern and helping behavior in toddlers, to gains in cognitive empathy in
preschoolers, and, finally, to the stability of empathy as a trait into early adulthood.
As early as 18 to 72 hours following birth, newborns who were exposed to the sound of
another infant crying often displayed distress reactions, a phenomenon referred to as reflexive or
reactive crying, or emotional contagion (Martin & Clark 1982; Sagi & Hoffman 1976; Simner
1971). Newborns responded more strongly to another infant’s cry than to a variety of control
stimuli, including silence, white noise, synthetic cry sounds, non-human cry sounds, and their
own cry (Martin & Clark 1982; Sagi & Hoffman 1976; Simner 1971). This suggests that infant
distress reactions to the cry of another infant are not simply a response to the aversive noise of
the cry; rather, they may be a very early precursor to empathic responding. The specificity of
reflexive crying to the sounds of other infants’ cries supports the idea that there is a biological
infancy are thought to be precursors to empathic concern (Hoffman 1975; Zahn-Waxler &
Radke-Yarrow 1990). Young infants are thought to not fully differentiate the self from others
and to have only basic emotion regulation capabilities. Young infants, in fact, tend to become
overwhelmed with others’ negative emotions and may engage in behaviors, such as self-
comforting, to reduce their own distress. Along with the development of self-other
differentiation, perspective taking, and emotion regulation during the second year of life,
however, there appears to be a transformation from concern for the self to a capability for
the development of empathy related behaviors over the second and third years of life. These
studies examined typically developing children’s responses to the simulated distress of a stranger
and of their parent, at home and in the laboratory, between the ages of 14 and 36 months. They
measured different manifestations of empathic responding, including concern (e.g., sad look,
“I’m sorry”), hypothesis testing (e.g., “What happened?”), prosocial behavior (e.g., hugs, “Are
you ok?”), as well as precursors to empathy such as personal distress and self-referential
behaviors (i.e., “trying on” another’s experience). Many of these behaviors underwent significant
development over the second year of life, with age related increases in empathic concern,
hypothesis testing, and prosocial behavior between 14 and 24 months of age (Knafo et al. 2008;
Zahn-Waxler et al. 1992a). In fact, nearly all toddlers engaged in some helping behavior in
response to real and simulated distress by two years of age. Furthermore, the quality of prosocial
behavior developed over the second year of life. The youngest infants’ responses were comprised
variety of helping behaviors, such as verbal comfort and advice, sharing, and distracting the
person in distress (Zahn-Waxler et al. 1992a). By the third year of life, young children were
capable of a variety of empathy related behaviors, including expressing verbal and facial concern
and interest in another’s distress, and continued to engage in a variety of helping behaviors.
Empathy typically has both emotional and cognitive components, although these
another’s emotional state, which, as stated above, children may experience in some form as early
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as infancy and toddlerhood. In contrast, cognitive empathy, which is also sometimes referred to
as theory of mind or perspective taking, is the ability to accurately imagine another’s experience.
As children enter the preschool and elementary school years, there are significant gains
particularly in the area of cognitive empathy. This is partially because the children’s increased
language capacities facilitate empathic reflection as well as the measurement of such empathic
abilities.
By preschool age (4-5 years), children are generally capable of taking another’s
perspective in false belief tasks, which is a frequently used indicator of theory of mind
development (Wellman et al. 2001). During false belief tasks, children are typically presented
with a scenario with two characters, during which one of the characters places an item in a given
location and leaves the room. Then, the second character arrives and moves the item to a new
location. When the first character re-enters the room, the participating child is asked where the
first character will look for the item. If the child has a theory of mind, she should respond with
the original location rather than the true location, thereby indicating a capability to see the
situation from the (limited) perspective of the character who left the room (Wellman et al. 2001).
The developmental trajectory in regard to performance in this task is similar across cultures,
although there is some discrepancy in the timing of development (Liu et al. 2008). The ability to
understand others’ perspectives is integral for fully and successfully identifying with another’s
experience. Theory of mind helps to transform the early developing affective experience of
empathy to a more sympathetic, other focused experience by more fully attaching one’s empathic
feelings to a conceptualization of the other’s experience rather than one’s own. The increase in
the ability to identify with another’s experience also allows children to engage in more effective
helping strategies, as they are presumably viewing the situation more accurately. For instance, if
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a child sees his friend crying, emotional empathy may motivate the child to want to help, but
cognitive empathy may elucidate the fact that the other child is sad and may need to be
comforted. While these two aspects of empathy typically occur together once they are developed,
they can also develop unequally. This unequal development may lead to social dysfunction,
childhood, but are these gains consistent and do some children become more empathic than
others? Eisenberg and colleagues (1999) conducted a longitudinal study on the stability and
empathic concern, and perspective taking were measured at various time points from
approximately 4 to 20 years of age. Prosocial behavior was measured through observation at the
children’s preschool and at the laboratory, as well as self, parent, and/or friend report, depending
on the time point. Empathy related responding (e.g., empathic concern and perspective taking)
was measured through self and friend report at intermediate time points. Early prosocial
behavior, specifically, observed spontaneous sharing, predicted later prosocial dispositions, with
empathy related responding appearing to partially mediate this relation (Eisenberg et al. 1999).
This suggests that empathy may be conceptualized as part of a larger prosocial personality trait
that develops in children and motivates helping behaviors into young adulthood (Eisenberg et al.
1999). In addition, in Knafo and colleagues’ study (2008) that investigated early empathy
development (previously discussed), positive longitudinal correlations were found for both
cognitive and affective components of empathy from 14 to 36 months of age in young children’s
responses to simulated distress in their parent and a stranger. These longitudinal correlations
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suggest stable individual differences in empathy related behaviors during early childhood.
However, there is a need for additional longitudinal studies investigating the stability of
empathy, to determine whether empathy, in particular, shows stable individual differences from
early childhood into adulthood, and whether it precedes the formation of a “prosocial
disposition”.
As is evident from the previous discussion, the ability to empathize typically develops
early and rapidly. But what factors facilitate this development? The following section focuses on
factors influencing the development of empathy in the young child. We discuss within-child
factors including facial mimicry and imitation, parenting, and parent-child relationships (see
Figure 1).
Genetic Factors
environmental components were implicated in the development of empathy. In this study, young
dizygotic (“fraternal”) twins at 14 and 20 months of age. The premise of this study design is that
the degree to which the correlation in empathy levels is greater among monozygotic than
dizygotic twins reflects the impact of heredity. Significant heritability estimates were found at 14
months for different types of empathic responses, including prosocial behavior, empathic
greater correlation between monozygotic than dizygotic twins. This means that a proportion of
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individual differences in the tendency to empathize are likely associated with genetic differences.
As well, the finding that significant heritability estimates are more stable for empathic concern
component, in comparison to other empathy dimensions, suggests that these aspects of empathy
may signify a child’s innate responsiveness to others, which may be less malleable through
Knafo and colleagues (2008) later expanded on this study with a larger twin sample and
the addition of 24 and 36 month time points. The focus of this follow up study was to investigate
the relative contributions of genetics and shared environment to the development of empathy.
The researchers found that the proportion of variance in empathy (defined by the combination of
empathic concern, hypothesis testing, and prosocial behavior) associated with heritability effects
increased with age, and the proportion associated with shared environmental effects (a common
home environment) decreased with age (Knafo et al. 2008). By 24 and 36 months of age,
heritability was associated with one third to almost one half of the variation in children’s
empathy. These studies demonstrate the importance of genetic influences, in concert with
Neurodevelopmental Factors
There are several areas of the brain implicated in empathic behavior and empathy
development. Studies of macaque monkeys have revealed a special class of motor neurons,
referred to as mirror neurons, that respond similarly to the perception of actions in others and the
production of actions in oneself (Gallese et al. 2009; Iacoboni & Dapretto 2006). There is
evidence, albeit less direct, that the human brain contains a similar mirror neuron system, which
lies in premotor and surrounding areas of the frontal and parietal lobes (Iacoboni 2008). On their
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own, mirror neurons and the mirror neuron system are not responsible for empathic feelings;
rather, they are thought to provide a neural basis for connecting our own and others’ experiences.
According to this theory, viewing another’s emotional state automatically and unconsciously
activates one’s personal associations with that state, causing, in the absence of inhibition, one to
react to another’s experience as one would to one’s own (Preston & de Waal 2002). This
automatic state matching is thought to form the basis for higher levels of empathy, with de Waal
(2008) noting that the emotional engagement induced by state matching is integral for prosocial
outcomes of perspective taking. The mirror neuron system may explain how this automatic state
In order to induce empathy, mirror neurons must communicate with many other areas of
the brain. The insular cortex has been shown to connect premotor mirror neurons to the limbic
system, which processes the emotional aspects of empathy inducing situations (Carr et al. 2003;
Iacoboni & Dapretto 2006; Preston & de Waal 2002). The limbic system is an evolutionarily
older area of the brain involved in the experiencing of emotions. Different areas of the limbic
system may process different types of emotional stimuli associated with empathy. For example,
the anterior insula and anterior cingulate cortex are activated when viewing disgust expressions,
while the amygdala is activated when observing faces displaying fear or distress (Decety &
Jackson 2006).
In order to experience empathy and not become overwhelmed with personal distress,
neural mechanisms involved in emotion regulation must be activated. The prefrontal cortex
appears to be important for reducing the personal distress that is activated in response to
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another’s distress; this allows the observer to connect on a more cognitive level with the other’s
experience and aids in helping behavior (Decety & Jackson 2006). Also involved in
distinguishing personal distress from empathy are areas of the brain responsible for self other
differentiation, namely the right temporo-parietal junction, the posterior cingulate, and the
precuneus (Decety & Jackson 2006). In order to engage in perspective taking, which is integral
for cognitive empathy, areas of the frontal and parietal lobes involved in executive functioning
need to be activated, including the frontopolar cortex, the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, the
medial prefrontal cortex, and the right inferior parietal lobe (Decety & Jackson 2006). During
this process, areas of the temporal lobe are also activated, providing access to long term
memories that may be relevant to the situation (Preston & de Waal 2002). While there has been a
recent surge of interest in the neural mechanisms involved in empathy, there is still much
Temperament
Temperament is comprised of a variety of attributes that form the early basis for
personality development. As temperament is thought to be present from birth and thus have
reflect genetic influences on empathy development. Rothbart and colleagues (1994) found that
fearfulness in infants predicted parent reported empathic concern when the children reached
school age. Similarly, behaviorally inhibited, or shy, preschool aged children were rated by their
parents as higher in empathy and guilt than other children (Cornell & Frick 2007); however,
behaviorally inhibited toddlers were found to be less likely to engage in empathic and helping
behaviors with a stranger (Young et al. 1999). These divergent findings suggest that behaviorally
inhibited children may display higher levels of empathic behavior in familiar contexts, which is
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captured in the parent reports; they may, however, be less likely to respond to another’s distress
the degree to which one physiologically responds to stimuli in their environment, has also been
associated with empathy. For example, infants who showed relatively low levels of motor and
affective responses to novel sensory stimuli at four months, were found to respond less
empathically to a stranger simulating distress at age two (Young et al.1999). The association
between low reactivity to sensory stimuli in infancy and others’ distress in toddlerhood may be
an early sign of underarousal that may lead to later callousness and antisocial behavior.
Alternatively, this finding may reflect a more general lack of reactivity to social and nonsocial
stimuli that may or may not have an effect on later antisocial behavior (Young et al. 1999).
contribute to the development of empathy. An important mechanism for engaging with and
learning about the experiences of others is through motor mimicry, particularly the imitation of
facial expressions. When we interact with others, we often unconsciously subtly imitate motor
mannerisms, including facial expressions (Hess & Bourgeois 2009; Sato & Yoshikawa 2006).
There is evidence that being prevented from mimicking may impair emotion recognition in some
contexts (Oberman et al. 2007; Stel & van Knippenberg 2008). In addition, individuals with high
trait empathy have been found to engage in more facial mimicry than those with low trait
empathy (Sonnby-Borgstrom et al. 2003). Mimicry, then, may be essential in the development of
empathy.
There is evidence to suggest that the tendency to imitate facial gestures (i.e., mouth
opening and tongue protrusion) begins early in infancy in both humans (Meltzoff & Moore 1983)
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and monkeys (Ferrari et al. 2006). There has also been a single report indicating that newborn
expressions of emotion such as fear, sadness, and surprise (Field et al. 1982). More generally,
individual differences in behavioral imitation abilities during toddlerhood have been found to
predict conscience in early childhood (Forman et al. 2004). Through imitating facial expressions
associated with certain emotions, infants may begin to internalize the emotional experience of
the other (Atkinson 2007). For example, when an infant smiles in response to a social partner’s
smile, he may feel happy because he is smiling, and therefore shares the other’s emotions. With
increased experiences, this feeling of shared emotion may become more automatic, and more
like emotional empathy. Similarly, imitation of others’ actions may facilitate the development of
cognitive empathy, or theory of mind. For instance, a toddler may cover his eye and say “My eye
hurts” when viewing his mother engaging in similar distress behaviors, which may help him
internalize, and therefore better understand, his mother’s situation. The tendency to imitate and
mimic others’ experiences is likely an integral factor in the internalization of others’ emotions
Parenting
Since parents and caregivers have a significant socializing influence on infants and
toddlers, it follows that parenting would influence the early development of empathy. One aspect
the level of synchrony between parent and child. Synchrony is the temporal matching of
development of morality, Feldman (2007) found that mother-infant synchrony measured in the
first year of life (3 and 9 months) was directly associated with empathy level in childhood and
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adolescence (6 and 13 years). Specifically, the more mothers and infants matched and influenced
each others’ behaviors during face-to-face play in infancy, the more empathy was expressed by
the child during mother-child conversations that occurred during middle childhood and
adolescence. They did not, however, measure empathy outside of the mother-child dyad.
Interestingly, in this study synchrony was associated with later empathy, but not moral cognition,
suggesting that it may be more important for the emotional, rather than cognitive, aspects of
empathy.
The findings regarding the longitudinal relation between early mother-infant synchrony
and later empathy enriches and extends the previous discussion of the role of imitation in early
degree, internalize others’ feelings and experiences through the simulation of others’ emotional
expressions and actions during imitation. In addition, parents match their infants’ affect (i.e.,
affective synchrony) during interaction. This may provide children with two important
experiences. On the one hand, it may lead children to feel that another, the parent, can feel what
they feel. On the other hand, it may provide children with an understanding that their own
emotionally motivated actions can influence another, which may promote the feelings of efficacy
empathy development. Toddlers and children who had parents who were observed to display
more warmth toward them during a variety of interactions in their home and in a laboratory
setting tended to be more empathic (Robinson et al. 1994; Zhou et al. 2002). The way that
parents talk to their children about emotions also appears to affect empathy development. The
degree to which parents direct their children to label emotions is associated with children’s
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emotional concern for others; the degree to which parents provide explanations concerning the
causes and consequences of emotions is associated with more attempts by the child to understand
others’ emotions (Garner 2003). Taken together, it seems that parents who provide a warm,
positive environment for their children, and who provide a model for being sensitive to others’
needs and emotions through synchronous interactions with their child and talking about emotions
with their child are most likely to have more empathic children.
The previously discussed parenting factors that appear to influence empathy development
are indices of the quality of the parent-child relationship. Another measure of relationship quality
is the security of a child’s attachment to their parent. Attachment security is typically measured
with the Strange Situation procedure, during which the children’s reactions to a series of
separations from and reunions with their parent are assessed (Ainsworth et al. 1978). Securely
attached children display behaviors consistent with a trusting, loving relationship with their
parent. These typically include being upset by the parent’s absence and being calmed by the
parent’s presence, and feeling comfortable enough to explore their surroundings (Ainsworth et
al. 1978). Insecurely attached children may ignore their parent upon their return, remain upset
and clingy, or not exhibit an organized strategy of re-engaging with the parent. Some studies
have found that attachment security promotes empathy development for all children.
Kestenbaum and Sroufe (1989), for example, found that securely attached preschoolers engaged
There is also evidence that a secure attachment may be more important for empathy
development among some children than among others, which demonstrates that empathy is
likely influenced by an interaction between within-child and relationship factors. In a study that
examined the influence of temperament and attachment on empathic responding in young girls, it
was only among temperamentally fearful girls that an insecure attachment style predicted less
empathic concern for a stranger (van der Mark et al. 2002). Temperamentally shy or fearful
children are quick to engage with others’ distress, but tend to become overwhelmed with their
own personal distress (van der Mark et al. 2002). It may be that when temperamentally shy
children grow up in a secure environment, they are less likely to become overwhelmed with their
own distress, and better able to use their natural tendency to engage with others’ distress to
responsive orientation (MRO), which is associated with the development of child conscience,
including empathy. MRO is defined by maternal responsiveness and shared positive affect
between parent and child. Responsiveness and shared positive affect were measured in lengthy,
naturalistic interactions between mother and child at home and in the laboratory (Kochanska
2002). MRO was found to have a direct effect on moral emotions, with maternal responsiveness
during infancy predicting higher empathic distress in toddlers at 22 months of age (Kochanska et
al. 1999) and MRO predicting later guilt reactions in children at 45 months of age (Kochanska et
al. 2005). In other words, young children with more responsive parents were more likely to
development is embedded within these warm and responsive dyads will more eagerly embrace
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their parents’ values and be more likely to develop a strong conscience, which is thought to be
Thus far we have discussed the typical stages of empathy development, as well as
multiple factors that play a role in this development. We now describe various outcomes in the
social domain that are related to, and possibly facilitated by, the development of empathy.
Below we discuss empathy’s part in promoting the internalization of rules, prosocial and
altruistic behavior, social competence, and relationship quality (see Figure 1).
Internalization of Rules
The ability to empathize with others’ distress may be an important factor in learning right
from wrong. Kochanska and colleagues undertook a set of seminal studies of the development of
conscience and moral behavior (Aksan & Kochanska 2005). They examined the precursors to
and relation between moral emotions (i.e., empathic distress and guilt) and rule-compatible
conduct in typically developing young children (33 and 45 months). Moral emotions and rule-
distress was measured by children’s responses to a stranger’s simulated distress (i.e., negative
response by a stranger after dropping a large box on her foot), while guilt was measured by
children’s responses to a stranger’s distress due to a personally caused mishap (i.e., the child was
led to believe he or she damaged a special possession). Children who displayed more guilt in
response to wrongdoing and empathic distress in response to another’s distress were also more
likely to follow given rules (e.g., clean up toys) in the absence of supervision (Aksan &
Kochanska 2005). So, from a very early age, there appears to be an association between the
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experience of other focused emotions and the internalization of rules. This suggests that
empathy, in concert with guilt, may play a part in children’s learning of right and wrong.
helping, behavior. The primatologist and theorist de Waal (2008) proposed that empathy is an
evolved mechanism that promotes altruistic behavior. If a person sees someone in distress, for
example, he may himself begin to feel distressed; this would provide a strong internal signal that
the other person needs help. At that point, the feeling of distress may lead the person to think of
what might make him feel better in similar situations, which may then promote helping behavior.
Many studies have examined how a person’s tendency and ability to empathize predicts
prosocial behavior toward others. In fact, in an extensive review and meta-analysis of relevant
literature, Eisenberg and Miller (1987) found that empathy generally had moderate positive
correlations with prosocial behavior. Moreover, Zahn-Waxler and colleagues have consistently
found associations between empathic concern and prosocial behavior in their studies on early
As suggested above, de Waal (2008) argued that empathy is the evolutionary mechanism
that motivates altruistic behavior and similar prosocial behavior. There are two prominent lines
of thinking that may explain this association. First, empathy may motivate altruistic, other
focused helping behavior that occurs despite its cost to the self. Alternately, prosocial or
altruistic behavior may be motivated by a desire to reduce the negative arousal induced by
viewing another’s distress. Social psychological research has focused on distinguishing between
these alternate motivations by assessing individuals helping behaviors when they are placed as
witnesses to a person in distress, where an easy escape from the distressing situation is or is not
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possible (Batson et al. 1988; Dovidio et al. 1990; Stocks et al. 2009). Participants in these
situations tended to help regardless of ease of escape, supporting the idea that it is empathy that
promotes a desire to help rather than a desire to reduce one’s own negative feeling, which
presumably could have been more easily accomplished by leaving these situations (Batson et al.
1988; Dovidio et al. 1990; Stocks et al. 2009). So, along with empathy being associated with
prosocial behavior, there is experimental evidence that further supports de Waal’s argument that
empathy, in some situations, may, in fact, be a direct mechanism for motivating prosocial
behavior.
Social Competence
In addition to being associated with helping and moral behavior toward others, the ability
to empathize is also associated with social skills. Social skills index the ability to function
optimally with others. In their review, Eisenberg and Miller (1987) found that higher levels of
empathy in children were associated with more cooperative and socially competent behavior.
Other researchers have also found that children with higher empathy for positive and negative
emotions are more social competent (Saliquist et al. 2009; Zhou et al. 2002). In these studies,
social competence was measured by parent and teacher ratings of socially appropriate behaviors
and popularity.
Relationship Quality
The ability to empathize also seems to be important for relationship quality, in part, by
and perspective taking were associated with the attachment dimensions of trust and of comfort
with interpersonal closeness, in regard to adult romantic relationships (Joireman et al. 2002). In a
relevant study, when children reported greater empathy in response to a story, they placed
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characters from the story physically closer to themselves; this suggests empathy may motivate a
desire for increased interpersonal closeness (Strayer & Roberts 1997). As well, empathy for
one’s partner, perspective taking, and dispositional empathy have been associated with romantic
relationship satisfaction in adults, which is important for relationship maintenance (Cramer 2003;
Davis & Oathout 1987). Dispositional empathy has also been associated with higher levels of
toward others and facilitating social interactions and relationships. Empathy is involved in the
internalization of rules that can play a part in protecting others, and, significantly, it may be the
mechanism that motivates the desire to help others, even at a cost to oneself. In addition,
empathy plays an important role in becoming a socially competent person with meaningful social
relationships.
Another way to learn about the development of empathy is to investigate its development
and presentation in atypical situations. Two prototypical “disorders of empathy” are autism and
disorders (ASDs), are a set of developmental disorders, which are present by age three, and
the presence of restricted interests and repetitive behaviors (DSM-IV-TR 2000). While
psychopathy is not an official diagnosis, it is a well established set of symptoms that begin in
childhood. Psychopathy is characterized by a lack of empathy and guilt, as well as the presence
ASDs and psychopathy may involve different types of deficits in empathic ability, which
correspond with very different outcomes. There is some evidence to suggest that individuals with
ASDs may primarily have a deficit in cognitive empathy, while individuals with psychopathy
primarily have a deficit in emotional empathy. Specific empathy deficits inherent to each of
these disorders and a discussion of how these deficits relate to outcomes for individuals with
The presence of empathy deficits in individuals with ASDs is well established and are, in
fact, one of the criteria for diagnosing the disorder (DSM-IV-TR 2000). As well, empathy
deficits, and systemizing strengths (i.e., rule based thinking), are the central component of the
extreme male brain theory of autism (Baron-Cohen 2002). This theory argues that autism may be
an extreme variant of normal male intelligence, with an overreliance on and extreme preference
for predictable, systematic situations that are uncommon in the social world. Evidence for this
theory includes the predominance of males to females diagnosed with ASDs, as well as sex
differences among typically developing individuals favoring females to males in social areas
such as mindreading and empathy. Yirmiya and colleagues (1992) found that high functioning
children with autism (IQ > 75; 9-16 years) performed less well on empathy related tasks (i.e.,
discriminating affective states of others, perspective taking, and emotional response) than their
typically developing peers; a finding that has been replicated comparing children with autism to
children with other mental health disorders, including depression and ADHD (Dyck et al. 2001).
By as early as 20 months of age, children with autism are less likely to respond to and show less
concern for others in distress compared to typically developing and developmentally delayed
children (Bacon et al. 1998; Charman et al. 1997; Sigman et al. 1992). In a study in our lab
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examining the social and emotional development of infant siblings of children with ASDs, we
found preliminary evidence of an association between the level of empathic responding of 24 and
30 month old toddlers and the severity of autism symptomatology at 30 months. These
preliminary results support findings from previous studies indicating less empathic responding in
Despite significant evidence that individuals with ASDs have empathy impairments,
relatively little is known about the exact nature of these impairments. Dziobek and colleagues
(2008) investigated specific empathy deficits in adults with Asperger’s disorder, which is
considered a somewhat higher functioning type of ASD. These adults were found to have deficits
in cognitive empathy, but not in emotional empathy. This is consistent with the “theory of mind”
understanding of autism. This theory proposes a central role of deficits in the ability to read
others’ minds or understand the perspectives of others in contributing to the overall social and
communication deficits present in ASDs (Baron-Cohen et al. 1985; White et al. 2009). More
specifically, individuals with ASDs are more likely to fail tasks that require taking the
perspective of others than typically developing and developmentally delayed individuals (Baron-
There has recently been a great deal of interest in the neural underpinnings of empathy
deficits in individuals with ASDs, implicating dysfunction in various regions important for
empathy. Some findings have suggested mirror neuron system dysfunction in people with ASDs
(Dapretto et al. 2005; Iacoboni & Dapretto 2006; Oberman & Ramachandran 2007). There is
also evidence that individuals with ASDs show amygdala dysfunction, which, as discussed,
appears to be involved with the emotional experience of empathy (Ashwin et al. 2007; Baron-
Cohen 2004; Blair 2008). Ultimately, however, current research suggests a predominantly
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cognitive basis for empathy dysfunction in individuals with ASDs, which may eventually
suggest pathways for improving the ability to empathize in individuals with ASDs.
Psychopathy
Empathy deficits may be even more central to psychopathy than to ASDs. In contrast to
the previous discussion of empathy deficits in autism, antisocial behavior and psychopathy may
be characterized by deficits in emotional empathy rather than cognitive empathy (Blair 2005;
Blair 2007). Multiple studies have found no theory of mind impairments in individuals with
psychopathy (Blair et al. 1996; Dolan & Fullam 2004; Richell et al. 2003). In contrast,
individuals with psychopathy show less physiological responsiveness to distress cues (Blair
1999; Blair et al. 1997; House & Milligan 1976) and deficits in their ability to recognize facial
affect, particularly fear (Blair et al. 2001; Blair et al. 2004; Hastings et al. 2007). There has been
recent supportive evidence from neuroscience studies, which shows dysfunction in empathy
related brain areas, particularly areas of the limbic and paralimbic system, among psychopathic
individuals (Kiehl 2006; Shirtcliff et al. 2009). That these individuals evidence dysfunction in
limbic and paralimbic structures associated with experiencing emotions supports the primacy of
suggests that the ability to feel another’s pain is the central component to motivating prosocial
behavior and minimizing antisocial behavior. It also suggests that the ability to cognitively
empathic connection with the other. From a broader perspective, we have presented evidence
that cognitive empathy is more impaired in individuals with autism while emotional empathy is
more impaired in individuals with psychopathy. This suggests that the cognitive and emotional
23
components of empathy can develop unequally, and that both are necessary in promoting healthy
social functioning.
Conclusions
complying with social rules and engaging in altruistic behavior. Empathy also facilitates the
Empathy can be both an emotional and a cognitive experience. The ability to empathize begins at
an early age, with infants as young as 18 hours showing some responsiveness to other infants’
distress. During the second year of life, toddlers responses to others’ distress typically transform
from an overwhelming personal distress reaction to a more other oriented empathic reaction. At
the same time, toddlers become capable of rather sophisticated helping behaviors. As children
reach the preschool years, significant developments occur in cognitive empathy, or theory of
mind abilities. There is evidence to suggest that these early dispositions toward empathy and
The ability to empathize develops with contributions from various biologically and
environmentally based factors. These factors include genetics, facial mimicry and imitation,
subserving areas of the brain such as the mirror neuron system and the limbic system, child
temperament, parenting factors such as warmth, parent-child synchrony, and other qualities of
the parent-child relationship. If one or more of these factors function atypically, they may
psychopathy. The empathy deficits present in autism spectrum disorders may be more indicative
of impairments in the ability to take the perspective of others, while the empathy deficits in
These “disorders of empathy” further highlight the importance of the ability to empathize by
Acknowledgments
(T32HD007473). We would like to thank Heather Henderson, Naomi Ekas, and Seniz Celimli
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Contributors Outcomes
Internalization
Genetics of Rules
Within-Child Behavior
Neural Factors toward Others Prosocial
Temperament Behavior
Empathy
Social
Imitation
Social Competence
Parenting Socialization Relationships
Factors Relationship
Parent-Child
Relationship Quality