TY - JOUR
T1 - Emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and temperament characteristics of high-empathy children
AU - Miller, Paul
AU - Jansen Op De Haar, Marian A.
N1 - Funding Information:
1This research was supported by an Arizona State University internal grant to the first author. We wish to thank the parents and child care center teachers who participated in this research. 2Address all correspondence concerning this article to Paul A. Miller, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Arts and Sciences, ASU West, 4701 W. Thunderbird Rd., Phoenix, Arizona 85069.
PY - 1997/3
Y1 - 1997/3
N2 - Recent research has suggested that individual differences in young children's capacity for empathy and altruism has heritable components and may be related to early temperament. These individual differences, like other human capacities such as intelligence, may be distributed normally. Thus, "high-empathy" children may exhibit cognitive, emotional, and behavioral precocity in empathic and altruistic responding, and begin expressing these capacities early in life. Twenty-seven 2-to 8-year-old (M = 53 months), primarily Euro-American high-empathy children (10 male) were identified by childcare center staff. Ethnographically oriented interviews of their mothers provided detailed accounts of the children's empathic and altruistic responding in everyday interactions at home and school. As a group, the children were described as emotionally positive, especially sociable individuals whose empathic and altruistic responses were highly spontaneous, occurred more frequently, and differed from peers in depth, intensity, and persistence. Parallels were drawn between these capacities and temperamental dispositions for self-regulation and emotional reactivity. Limitations of the methodology and directions of future research are discussed.
AB - Recent research has suggested that individual differences in young children's capacity for empathy and altruism has heritable components and may be related to early temperament. These individual differences, like other human capacities such as intelligence, may be distributed normally. Thus, "high-empathy" children may exhibit cognitive, emotional, and behavioral precocity in empathic and altruistic responding, and begin expressing these capacities early in life. Twenty-seven 2-to 8-year-old (M = 53 months), primarily Euro-American high-empathy children (10 male) were identified by childcare center staff. Ethnographically oriented interviews of their mothers provided detailed accounts of the children's empathic and altruistic responding in everyday interactions at home and school. As a group, the children were described as emotionally positive, especially sociable individuals whose empathic and altruistic responses were highly spontaneous, occurred more frequently, and differed from peers in depth, intensity, and persistence. Parallels were drawn between these capacities and temperamental dispositions for self-regulation and emotional reactivity. Limitations of the methodology and directions of future research are discussed.
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U2 - 10.1023/A:1024430532155
DO - 10.1023/A:1024430532155
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0031499520
SN - 0146-7239
VL - 21
SP - 109
EP - 125
JO - Motivation and Emotion
JF - Motivation and Emotion
IS - 1
ER -