An Investigation of Age-Related Differences in Understanding of Empathy and Emotions
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HKuske Dissertation 2009-2010_3.pdf (2.414Mb)
Date
30/06/2010Item status
Restricted AccessAuthor
Kuske, Hannah
Metadata
Abstract
The current study investigated age-related differences in social cognition, emotional
understanding, Theory of Mind (ToM) and empathy. A new task assessing different
aspects of social cognition (ToM, emotional understanding, knowledge/understanding
of social rules) using cartoon-strip stories was applied in conjunction with established
measures of emotion recognition (‘the faces task’, or FEEST), ToM (‘Reading the mind in the eyes task’), empathy (IRI) and executive functions (Brixton Spatial Anticipation Task). Results obtained from 20 elderly adults (aged 56-84) were compared to results from 20 younger adults (aged 19-26). Significant differences in all tasks were found with younger participants performing better than their older counterparts. Older people were less able to recognize sad and fearful emotional expressions, interpret people’s mindset from eye-region-only stimuli, scored lower on the executive functions task and reported themselves to be less empathetic. While there was a difference of overall age on the Social Cartoon Task, no differences were detected on the subscales. Different perspectives on emotional aging (neuropsychological and sociocognitive) are being discussed to interpret results. It is suggested that recent research indicates a development towards the formation of a neurocognitive view combining both approaches.