Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The susceptibility to emotional contagion has been psychometrically addressed by the self-reported Emotional Contagion Scale. With the present research, we validated a German adaptation of this scale and developed a mimicry brief version by selecting only the four items explicitly addressing the overt subprocess of mimicry. Across three studies (N1 = 195, N2 = 442, N3 = 180), involving various external measures of empathy, general personality domains, emotion recognition, and other constructs, the total German Emotional Contagion Scale demonstrated sound convergent and discriminant validity. A bi-factor model provided acceptable fit, suggesting the factorial validity of the total scale, which is aimed to measure a general factor, representing the susceptibility to emotional contagion. Longitudinal analyses across four measurement occasions revealed high temporal stabilities for the total scale across periods of up to 1 year as well as longitudinal measurement invariance of the factor loadings and partial invariance of the intercepts and residuals. The correlation pattern of the mimicry short version was comparable to the total Emotional Contagion Scale's correlation pattern, the unidimensional factor structure was confirmed, and it also demonstrated high temporal stabilities and longitudinal invariance. The present research underscores the relevance of susceptibility to emotional contagion and mimicry as personality constructs and provides valid measurement tools for assessing them in future research and practical contexts (e.g., assessment in the clinical or work context).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0331953PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

emotional contagion
28
contagion scale
12
susceptibility emotional
12
german emotional
8
mimicry version
8
total scale
8
high temporal
8
temporal stabilities
8
correlation pattern
8
emotional
7

Similar Publications

The susceptibility to emotional contagion has been psychometrically addressed by the self-reported Emotional Contagion Scale. With the present research, we validated a German adaptation of this scale and developed a mimicry brief version by selecting only the four items explicitly addressing the overt subprocess of mimicry. Across three studies (N1 = 195, N2 = 442, N3 = 180), involving various external measures of empathy, general personality domains, emotion recognition, and other constructs, the total German Emotional Contagion Scale demonstrated sound convergent and discriminant validity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Empathy, the ability to recognize and respond to others' emotions, enables individuals to experience emotions that either align with or differ from those of others. In rodents, emotional contagion is well established, as they reflexively express similar negative emotions when exposed to a stressed conspecific. However, because emotional responses toward others do not always result in direct contagion, whether they can modulate their emotional responses based on the social context remains unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: The COVID-19 pandemic caused lasting disruption to healthcare systems and the mental health of frontline workers. Though the acute crisis has passed, many healthcare workers (HCWs) continue to experience long-term psychological effects, including anxiety, grief, and burnout. This mixed-methods study investigates the enduring effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of physicians in a low-resource country.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neurodynamic evidence reveals identity top-down influences emotional contagion of race.

Cogn Neurodyn

December 2025

Department of Psychology, Renmin University of China, No.59,Zhongguancun Street, haidian District, Beijing, 100872 China.

Faces contain important information about emotion, race, identity, and age. A large body of research has illustrated that emotional contagion is influenced by race. The Categorization-Individuation Model (CIM) suggests that situational cues (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF