Abstract

Empathy is the ability to understand and share other people’s emotions. Researchers have debated whether Westerners and Asians differ in their self-report empathy. This study aimed to replicate a previously reported culture–sex interaction in self-report empathy using Australian and Mainland Chinese participants, to investigate the cultural differences in self-report empathy in each sex group, and to verify the moderated mediating effects of three empathy-related traits (i.e., independent self-construal, interdependent self-construal, and personal distress) on the cultural differences in self-report empathy in both sex groups. In this study, scores on two self-report questionnaires of empathy, namely, the Empathy Quotient (EQ) and the Interpersonal Reactivity Index (IRI), were compared between 196 Australian Caucasian (101 males) and 211 Mainland Chinese (59 males) university students. Results first confirmed the significant culture–sex interaction and illustrated that the cultural differences in empathy scores were significant only for female (i.e., Australian females had higher scores than Mainland Chinese females) but not for male participants. Furthermore, results of moderated mediation analyses indicated that higher self-report empathy in both females and males was related to higher interdependent self-construal (exhibited by Mainland Chinese) and less personal distress (exhibited by Australians), and particularly in females, also related to higher independent self-construal (exhibited by Australian females). The current study is one of few studies that suggest cultural differences in empathy are dependent on the sex of the participant. Moreover, the current findings have added new insights into the explanation of cultural differences in empathy using personal distress and self-construal.

Highlights

  • “Empathy is the lens through which we view others’ emotion expressions, and respond to them” (Sucksmith et al, 2013, p. 98)

  • With German and Mainland Chinese participants, Melchers et al (2015) found that the interaction between culture and sex on self-report empathy was significant, and the sex difference was larger in the former than in the latter group. These results suggest that the Western-Asian cross-cultural differences in empathy could be dependent on the sex of the individuals; studies based on different sex ratios might reach different conclusions concerning the cultural differences in empathy

  • The current study was conducted with Australian Caucasian and Mainland Han Chinese participants to investigate the impact of culture on self-report empathy, to determine the replicability of the culture–sex interaction in self-report empathy scores, and to identify factors that could account for the cultural differences

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Summary

Introduction

“Empathy is the lens through which we view others’ emotion expressions, and respond to them” (Sucksmith et al, 2013, p. 98). Significant culture– sex interactions in self-report empathy were found with German and Mainland Chinese participants (Melchers et al, 2015). Cognitive empathy involves the use of conscious processes to understand others’ emotional experiences in terms of background information or emotional contexts (Shamay-Tsoory et al, 2009). In applying the definition of empathy, some researchers consider that the IRI-FS and IRI-PD subscales do not measure empathy as such (Baron-Cohen and Wheelwright, 2004)

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