Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Disclosure process: an introduction
- 2 Patterns and functions of self-disclosure during childhood and adolescence
- 3 Intimacy and self-disclosure in friendships
- 4 Self-disclosure and the sibling relationship: what did Romulus tell Remus?
- 5 Lonely preadolescents' disclosure to familiar peers and related social perceptions
- 6 Children's disclosure of vicariously induced emotions
- 7 Moral development and children' differential disclosure to adults versus peers
- 8 Parential influences on children's willingness to disclose
- 9 Disclosure processes: issues for child sexual abuse victims
- 10 Self-disclosure in adolescents: a family systems perspective
- Author index
- Subject index
6 - Children's disclosure of vicariously induced emotions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Disclosure process: an introduction
- 2 Patterns and functions of self-disclosure during childhood and adolescence
- 3 Intimacy and self-disclosure in friendships
- 4 Self-disclosure and the sibling relationship: what did Romulus tell Remus?
- 5 Lonely preadolescents' disclosure to familiar peers and related social perceptions
- 6 Children's disclosure of vicariously induced emotions
- 7 Moral development and children' differential disclosure to adults versus peers
- 8 Parential influences on children's willingness to disclose
- 9 Disclosure processes: issues for child sexual abuse victims
- 10 Self-disclosure in adolescents: a family systems perspective
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
In recent years, social and developmental psychologists have increasingly studied vicariously induced emotional states. This attention to how individuals respond to other's emotional states and conditions reflects the recognition that emotions are frequently embedded in social interactions (see Eisenberg & Fabes, 1992). Individuals must learn to deal not only with their own directly induced emotions, but also with their reactivity to the emotions of others.
Several types of vicarious emotional responses have been differentiated. For example, empathy is defined as an emotional response that is based on the apprehension of another's emotional state or condition and is similar to the emotion of the other person. Sympathy is defined as feelings of sorrow or sadness for another, whereas personal distress is a vicariously induced aversive emotional reaction such as anxiety or discomfort. The degree to which individuals are willing or able to display vicariously induced emotional reactions varies considerably from person to person. Moreover, the ways in which individuals display these reactions (e.g., verbal and/or nonverbal reactions) also varies considerably from person to person.
In research on vicarious emotional responding, several types of measures may be obtained. For example, subjects often are asked to report their emotional reactions verbally when exposed to needy or distressed people. In addition, facial reactions sometimes are used to index vicarious emotional reactions, particularly in studies involving children.
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- Information
- Disclosure Processes in Children and Adolescents , pp. 111 - 134Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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