Questions:
Give me 25 comments or quotes from authors on their definition of “Affective Empathy”. The words “Affective Empathy” should be in the comments or quotes. Bold the words “Affective Empathy” in comments or quotes
The output format should be.
Author Name, Last, First. This should be on a separate line and bold.
Comments or Quotes.
Source
URL Link to the Source
Sort the list alphabetically by Author Last name
https://chatgpt.com/c/681ee319-4740-800a-a264-eecdc68586b4
Certainly! Here are 25 definitions of Affective Empathy provided by various authors, sorted alphabetically by the author's last name. Each quote includes the author's name, the definition, the source, and a link to the source.
Baron-Cohen, Simon
"In empathizing, we, while retaining fully the sense of our own distinct consciousness, enter actively and imaginatively into others’ inner states to understand how they experience their world and how they are feeling, reaching out to what we perceive as similar while accepting difference, and experiencing upon reflection our own resulting feelings, appropriate to our own situation as empathic observer, which may be virtually the same feelings or different but sympathetic to theirs, within a context in which we care to respect and acknowledge their human dignity and our shared humanity."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Batson, Daniel
"Empathy is about spontaneously and naturally tuning into the other person's thoughts and feelings, whatever these might be. There are two major elements to empathy. The first is the cognitive component: Understanding the others feelings and the ability to take their perspective [...] the second element to empathy is the affective component. This is an observer’s appropriate emotional response to another person's emotional state."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Bonfils, K.A., et al.
"Although the definition of empathy is often heavily debated, most agree that Affective Empathy refers to one’s emotional response to the perceived situation of another person."
Source: Affective empathy in neurodegenerative disorders: The importance of measurement type
URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0149763421002220
Decety, Jean & Moriguchi, Yoshiya
"Affective Empathy is the experience of similar emotions between the self and another, based on automatic perception-action coupling and shared representations."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Affective Empathy
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions/affective-empathy
Eisenberg, Nancy
"Empathy is an affective response that stems from the apprehension or comprehension of another's emotional state or condition and is similar to what the other person is feeling or would be expected to feel."
Source: Social emotions
URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_emotions
Espinosa, Christian
"Affective Empathy is the ability to share the feelings of others without any direct emotional stimulation to oneself."
Source: Cognitive vs Affective Empathy Leadership
URL: https://christianespinosa.com/blog/cognitive-vs-affective-empathy-leadership/
Feshbach, Norma
"Affective Empathy is an affective response that stems from the comprehension of another’s emotional state or condition, which is identical or very similar to the other’s emotion, or what would be expected to feel."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Goldman, Alvin I.
"Affective Empathy is the ability to perceive another person’s point-of-view, experience the emotions of another and behave compassionately."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Ha, Thu-Huong
"Affective Empathy is 'feeling what another feels.'"
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Hein, Grit, et al.
"Affective Empathy is a sort of 'mimicking' of one person’s affective state by that of another."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Hoffman, Martin L.
"Affective Empathy is an affective state, caused by sharing of the emotions or sensory states of another person."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Huderi
"Affective Empathy is the response and feeling to others’ emotions; it includes empathic concern and personal distress."
Source: The Effect of Affective Empathy on Prosocial Behavior among College Students
URL: https://drpress.org/ojs/index.php/EHSS/article/view/20363
Ickes, William
"Affective Empathy is the act of constructing for oneself another's mental state."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Johnson, Mark
"Affective Empathy is a complex form of psychological inference in which observation, memory, knowledge, and reasoning are combined to yield insights into the thoughts and feelings of others."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Lazarus, Richard S.
"Affective Empathy is the tendency to apprehend another person’s condition or state of mind."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Losoya, Sandra H.
"Affective Empathy has long been thought to contribute to individuals’ abilities to understand, predict, experience, and relate to others’ behaviors, feelings, attitudes, and intentions."
Source: Affective Empathy | Interpersonal Sensitivity
URL: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781410600424-9/affective-empathy-sandra-losoya-nancy-eisenberg
Mehrabian, Albert
"Affective Empathy is an individual’s vicarious emotional response to perceived emotional experiences of others."
Source: Having Heart: Affective and Cognitive Empathy Scores vs. Residency Specialty Match at an Osteopathic Medical School
URL: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9054984/
Preston, Stephanie D. & de Waal, Frans B.M.
"Affective Empathy requires the sharing of another’s emotional state (i.e., affective resonance)."
Source: Affective empathy in neurodegenerative disorders: The importance of measurement type
URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0149763421002220
Richard-Mornas, Aurélie
"Susan exhibited 'hyper empathy', specifically an enhanced 'Affective Theory of Mind', but not heightened cognitive empathy."
Source: Brain surgery leaves woman with 'super empathy'
URL: https://www.wired.com/story/hyper-empathic-brain
Scudder, Mary F.
"Affective Empathy is 'feeling what another feels.'"
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Definitions Short
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions-short
Simon-Thomas, Emiliana R.
"Affective Empathy refers to the inner feelings that arise and the subtle copying of expressions that happens when we see others express emotion."
Source: Empathy Training Lit Review - Affective Empathy
URL: https://sites.google.com/site/empathytraininglitreview/definitions/affective-empathy
Travers, Mark
"Affective Empathy is the ability to share and mirror the feelings of others, experiencing their emotions alongside them."
Source: Affective Empathy Scale
URL: https://therapytips.org/personality-tests/affective-empathy-scale
Verywell Mind
"Affective Empathy (emotional understanding) involves sharing another person's emotions, feeling their distress as if it were one's own."
Source: What Is Empathy?
URL: https://www.verywellmind.com/what-is-empathy-2795562
Verywell Mind
"Affective Empathy (or 'emotional empathy'): The feelings we have in response to someone else's emotions."
Source: Empathy: Definition, types, and examples
URL: https://therapist.com/moods-and-emotions/empathy/