• J Pers Soc Psychol · Nov 2003

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    When accuracy hurts, and when it helps: a test of the empathic accuracy model in marital interactions.

    • Jeffry A Simpson, M Minda Orina, and William Ickes.
    • Department of Psychology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 76109, USA. jas@psyc.tamu.edu
    • J Pers Soc Psychol. 2003 Nov 1;85(5):881-93.

    AbstractThis study tested predictions from W. Ickes and J. A. Simpson's (1997, 2001) empathic accuracy model. Married couples were videotaped as they tried to resolve a problem in their marriage. Both spouses then viewed a videotape of the interaction, recorded the thoughts and feelings they had at specific time points, and tried to infer their partner's thoughts and feelings. Consistent with the model, when the partner's thoughts and feelings were relationship-threatening (as rated by both the partners and by trained observers), greater empathic accuracy on the part of the perceiver was associated with pre-to-posttest declines in the perceiver's feelings of subjective closeness. The reverse was true when the partner's thoughts and feelings were nonthreatening. Exploratory analyses revealed that these effects were partially mediated through observer ratings of the degree to which partners tried to avoid the discussion issue.

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