Narratives are thought to evoke emotions through empathy, which is thought to rely on mentalizing. In this study young adults rated emotional intensity while listening to a narrative and took an empathy test. We show how empathy correlates well with overall level of experienced intensity. However, no correlation with empathy is found in the parts of the story that received highest intensity ratings across participants. Reverse correlation analysis reveals that these parts contain physical threat scenarios, while parts where empathy is correlated with intensity describe social interaction that can only be understood through mentalizing. This suggests that narratives evoke emotions, both based on “simple” physical contagion (affective empathy) and on complex mentalizing (affective theory of mind) and that these effects may be more or less independent.
2020. Violent Trends in Hip-Hop Entertainment Journalism. Journal of Black Studies 51:3 ► pp. 228 ff.
Mak, Marloes & Roel M. Willems
2019. Mental simulation during literary reading: Individual differences revealed with eye-tracking. Language, Cognition and Neuroscience 34:4 ► pp. 511 ff.
Bálint, Katalin, Thomas Klausch & Tibor Pólya
2018. Watching Closely. Journal of Media Psychology 30:3 ► pp. 150 ff.
Carpenter, Jordan M., Melanie C. Green & Kaitlin Fitzgerald
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