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Featured researches published by Jakob Eklund.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2007

An additional antecedent of empathic concern: valuing the welfare of the person in need.

C. Daniel Batson; Jakob Eklund; Valerie L. Chermok; Jennifer L. Hoyt; Biaggio G. Ortiz

Two experiments examined the role of valuing the welfare of a person in need as an antecedent of empathic concern. Specifically, these experiments explored the relation of such valuing to a well-known antecedent--perspective taking. In Experiment 1, both perspective taking and valuing were manipulated, and each independently increased empathic concern, which, in turn, increased helping behavior. In Experiment 2, only valuing was manipulated. Manipulated valuing increased measured perspective taking and, in part as a result, increased empathic concern, which, in turn, increased helping. Valuing appears to be an important, largely overlooked, situational antecedent of feeling empathy for a person in need.


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2009

I've also experienced loss and fear : Effects of prior similar experience on empathy

Jakob Eklund; Teresia Andersson-Stråberg; Eric M. Hansen

Although it is frequently argued that empathy is increased by similar experiences, this idea has rarely been tested. This study investigated the relationship between empathy and prior similar experience. Participants read four different stories and rated the degree of empathy they felt. They also reported the extent to which they had prior similar experience of the events in the stories. We found that these self-reports of prior similar experience increased empathy for the persons in the stories. Similar experience may be an important situational antecedent for feeling empathy for another person. Pointing out similarities among experiences may be a fruitful means of training empathy.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2017

Older persons' expressions of emotional cues and concerns during home care visits. Application of the Verona coding definitions of emotional sequences (VR-CoDES) in home care.

Annelie Johansson Sundler; Jessica Höglander; Jakob Eklund; Hilde Eide; Inger Holmström

OBJECTIVE This study aims to a) explore to what extent older persons express emotional cues and concerns during home care visits; b) describe what cues and concerns these older persons expressed, and c) explore who initiated these cues and concerns. METHODS A descriptive and cross-sectional study was conducted. Data consisted of 188 audio recorded home care visits with older persons and registered nurses or nurse assistants, coded with the Verona coding definitions on emotional sequences (VR-CoDES). RESULTS Emotional expressions of cues and concerns occurred in 95 (51%) of the 188 recorded home care visits. Most frequent were implicit expressions of cues (n=292) rather than explicit concerns (n=24). Utterances with hints to hidden concerns (63,9%, n=202) were most prevalent, followed by vague or unspecific expressions of emotional worries (15,8%, n=50). Most of these were elicited by the nursing staff (63%, n=200). CONCLUSION Emotional needs expressed by the older persons receiving home care were mainly communicated implicitly. To be attentive to such vaguely expressed emotions may demand nursing staff to be sensitive and open. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS The VR-CoDES can be applied on audio recorded home care visits to analyse verbal and emotional communication, and may allow comparative research.


Omega-journal of Death and Dying | 2012

You are weeping for that which has been your delight : To experience and recover from grief

Camilla Ihrmark; Eric M. Hansen; Jakob Eklund; Rosa Stödberg

To explore how people experience grief and what factors are perceived as facilitating successful grief work, a survey was distributed to people who had completed a grief recovery course. The results showed that emotions, cognitions, physical expressions, and behaviors all characterize grief, but that emotions are the most central component. The course brought relief and was regarded most favorably by those having at least 1 year between the grief trigger event and participation in the course. Writing a letter in which course participants express their feelings to the loss object was perceived as the most successful aspect of the course. The letter might help with grief recovery by bringing aspects that have not been dealt with into conscious awareness.


Journal of Research in Childhood Education | 2016

Reducing Sex Differences in Children’s Empathy for Animals Through a Training Intervention

Malin Angantyr; Eric M. Hansen; Jakob Eklund; Kerstin Malm

ABSTRACT Humane education programs designed to increase children’s empathy for animals are becoming more common. A quasi-experiment tested the effectiveness of one such program by comparing 80 children who had completed the program with a control group of 57 children who had not. The children read a story involving an injured dog and rated the degree of empathic concern they felt for him. The results showed that girls tended to express more empathy for a dog than did boys, but this difference was not significant for children who underwent an animal empathy training program. This suggests that humane education programs can reduce sex differences by increasing boys’ empathy.


Working With Older People | 2012

Promoting empathy in social care for older people

Thomas Strandberg; Jakob Eklund; Jill Manthorpe

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to identify connections between empathy and social care and to describe aspects of empathy in social care work, by bringing together research from different f ...


The Journal of Psychology | 2018

Does Feeling Empathy Lead to Compassion Fatigue or Compassion Satisfaction? The Role of Time Perspective

Eric M. Hansen; Jakob Eklund; Anna Hallén; Carmen Stockman Bjurhager; Emil Norrström; Adam Viman; Eric L. Stocks

Abstract Research has shown that feeling empathy sometimes leads to compassion fatigue and sometimes to compassion satisfaction. In three studies, participants recalled an instance when they felt empathy in order to assess the role time perspective plays in how empathizers perceive the consequences of empathy. Study 1 revealed that college students perceive empathy as having more negative consequences in the short term, but more positive consequences in the long term. Study 2 showed that service industry professionals perceive the consequences of feeling empathy for customers who felt bad as less negative, and the consequences of feeling empathy for people who felt good as less positive, in the long as opposed to the short term. Because Studies 1 and 2 confounded time perspective with event specificity a third study was conducted in which event specificity was held constant across time perspectives. The same pattern of results emerged. The results of these studies indicate that perceptions of the effects of feeling empathy, whether positive or negative, become less extreme over time. These findings shed light on the relation between empathy and compassion fatigue and satisfaction by suggesting that situations that initially are experienced as stressful can over time make the empathizer stronger.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2018

“Same same or different?” A review of reviews of person-centered and patient-centered care

Jakob Eklund; Inger Holmström; Tomas Kumlin; Elenor Kaminsky; Karin Skoglund; Jessica Höglander; Annelie Johansson Sundler; Emelie Condén; Martina Summer Meranius

OBJECTIVE To provide a synthesis of already synthesized literature on person-centered care and patient-centered care in order to identify similarities and differences between the two concepts. METHODS A synthesis of reviews was conducted to locate synthesized literature published between January 2000 and March 2017. A total of 21 articles deemed relevant to this overview were synthesized using a thematic analysis. RESULTS The analysis resulted in nine themes present in person-centered as well as in patient-centered care: (1) empathy, (2), respect (3), engagement, (4), relationship, (5) communication, (6) shared decision-making, (7) holistic focus, (8), individualized focus, and (9) coordinated care. The analysis also revealed that the goal of person-centered care is a meaningful life while the goal of patient-centered care is a functional life. CONCLUSIONS While there are a number of similarities between the two concepts, the goals for person-centered and patient-centered care differ. The similarities are at the surface and there are important differences when the concepts are regarded in light of their different goals. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Clarification of the concepts may assist practitioners to develop the relevant aspects of care. Person-centered care broadens and extends the perspective of patient-centered care by considering the whole life of the patient.


The Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology | 2011

TOWARD A CONCEPTUALIZATION OF ETHNOCULTURAL EMPATHY

Chato Rasoal; Jakob Eklund; Eric M. Hansen


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2006

Empathy and viewing the other as a subject.

Jakob Eklund

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Eric M. Hansen

Mälardalen University College

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Jessica Höglander

Mälardalen University College

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Malin Angantyr

Mälardalen University College

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Hilde Eide

University College of Southeast Norway

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Adam Viman

Mälardalen University College

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Anna Hallén

Mälardalen University College

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Camilla Ihrmark

Mälardalen University College

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Carina Loeb

Mälardalen University College

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