1. Toward Feeling, Understanding, and Caring: The Development of Empathy in Young Autistic Children
- Author
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Li, Boya, Blijd-Hoogewys, Els, Stockmann, Lex, Vergari, Ilaria, and Rieffe, Carolien
- Abstract
Autistic people are often portrayed as lacking empathy. Yet they are not indifferent to others' feelings. To advance our understanding of the early development of empathy in autistic children, this longitudinal study followed the development of four empathy abilities: emotion contagion, attention to others, emotion acknowledgment, and prosocial actions, in 1- to 6-year-old autistic children (N = 61; M[subscript age] = 55.49 months), in comparison with non-autistic peers (N = 145; M[subscript age] = 52.16 months). Once a year, for 4 consecutive years, children's empathic reactions were evaluated by experimenters who acted out emotional episodes to elicit empathy in children, and by parents who filled out empathy questionnaires. We confirmed autistic children's difficulty attending to others, acknowledging others' emotions, and initiating prosocial actions. However, according to parents, they did not differ from non-autistic children in emotion contagion with others' negative emotions. Notably, autistic children showed a greater increase in prosocial actions over time than their non-autistic peers. We discussed how to interpret these findings in light of the "double empathy problem," and stressed the importance of removing the stereotypical view of autism. Furthermore, this study was among the first to show that autistic children have the potential to learn and to improve empathy skills.
- Published
- 2023
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