Empathic Responses to Affective Film Clips Following Brain Injury and the Association With Emotion Recognition Accuracy

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Dawn Neumann, Barbra Zupan

Abstract

To compare empathic responses to affective film clips in participants with traumatic brain injury (TBI) and controls, and examine associations with affect recognition. Cross sectional study using a quasi-experimental design. Multi-site study conducted at a postacute rehabilitation facility in the United States and a university in Canada. Adults (N=120) with moderate to severe TBI (n=60) and those without TBI (n=60), frequency matched for age and sex. Average time postinjury was 14 years (range: .5-37). Participants were shown affective film clips and asked to report how the main character in the clip felt and how they personally felt in response to the clip. Empathic responses were operationalized as participants feeling the same emotion they identified the character to be feeling. Participants with TBI had lower emotion recognition scores (P=.007) and fewer empathic responses than controls (67% vs 79%; P<.001). Participants with TBI accurately identified and empathically responded to characters' emotions less frequently (65%) than controls (78%). Participants with TBI had poorer recognition scores and fewer empathic responses to sad and fearful clips compared to controls. Affect recognition was associated with empathic respons...Continue Reading

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