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Associations of affective and cognitive empathy with depressive symptoms among a sample of Chinese college freshmen

•The presence of empathy and subclinical depressive symptoms was described in a population of college freshmen.•The associations of affective and cognitive empathy with depressive symptoms among college freshmen were analysed.•We found that affective empathy was positively associated with depressive...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of affective disorders 2021-09, Vol.292, p.652-659
Main Authors: Zhang, Ming, Wang, Shaishai, Wang, Zheng, Peng, Xiaoqin, Fei, Wenjing, Geng, Yiran, Zhang, Tianyang
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•The presence of empathy and subclinical depressive symptoms was described in a population of college freshmen.•The associations of affective and cognitive empathy with depressive symptoms among college freshmen were analysed.•We found that affective empathy was positively associated with depressive symptoms, while cognitive empathy was negatively related to depressive symptoms.•There were gender differences in the relationship between empathy and depressive symptoms. College freshmen are at high risk for mental and socioemotional problems after entering a new environment. However, few investigators have evaluated the associations between empathy and depressive symptoms among college freshmen. The present study examined the presence and associations of affective and cognitive empathy with depressive symptoms among college freshmen in China. In total, 4297 college freshmen completed the Interpersonal Reactivity Index as an assessment of empathy and the University Personality Inventory to evaluate the prevalence of depressive symptoms. The empathy scores of females were higher than that of males, and approximately 18.4% of freshmen had high-depressive symptoms (HDS). Freshmen with a higher positive component of affective empathy (empathic concern (EC)) experienced fewer HDS. In contrast, freshmen with a higher negative component of affective empathy (personal distress (PD)) and lower cognitive empathy (perspective taking (PT)) experienced more HDS. EC was negatively associated with depressive symptoms, PD was positively related to depressive symptoms, and PT was negatively associated with depressive symptoms. Males with a higher degree of PT experienced fewer HDS, while females with a higher degree of PT experienced more HDS. Affective empathy was positively associated with depressive symptoms, while cognitive empathy was negatively related to depressive symptoms. The association between affective and cognitive empathy with depressive symptoms may add some support to the detection of clinical depressive symptoms. These findings call for the necessity of considering the characteristics of affective and cognitive empathy as a crucial concern in the prevention of depressive symptoms.
ISSN:0165-0327
1573-2517
DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2021.05.111