Actors are Skilled in Theory of Mind But Not Empathy
Imagination, Cognition and Personality, Vol. 29, No 2, 2010.
by Thalia R. Goldstein, Katherine Wu, Ellen Winner
Actors must imagine themselves in a different world: they must adopt
the perspective of multiple characters, grasp their beliefs and
intentions, and feel their emotions. In this study we tested the
hypothesis that actors have unusually sharp mind-reading abilities and
unusually strong empathy. In Study 1, adolescent actors outperformed
adolescents without acting experience in their ability to imagine the
mental states expressed by pictures of peoples' eyes (a theory of mind
measure), but did not excel on empathy as measured by a self-report
scale. In Study 2, we replicated these findings with young adults using
a different measure of theory of mind. These findings show that
adolescent and adult actors are skilled in reading others' mental
states, but do not report above average levels of empathy. Thus,
strength in theory of mind can exist independently of strength in
empathy.
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