TY - JOUR
T1 - Empathy deficits in women with complex trauma following childhood sexual abuse
AU - Damari-Tabachnik, Ofri
AU - Heymann, Anita
AU - Perry, Anat
AU - Tiberg, Kobi
AU - Shlomi, Inbal
AU - Golland, Yulia
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/11/15
Y1 - 2025/11/15
N2 - Complex post-traumatic stress disorder (CPTSD) stemming from childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is characterized by profound interpersonal difficulties in later life. Despite the crucial role empathy plays in social functioning, the specific deficits in emotional and cognitive empathy in CPTSD remain understudied. This study employs a rich, naturalistic empathy task to investigate empathic responses among women with CPTSD following childhood sexual abuse. Female participants with CPTSD following CSA and female controls viewed autobiographical videos containing emotional pain, while providing dynamic ratings of their own distress and post-viewing assessments of their own and the targets' emotions. The results showed that the CPTSD group had higher levels of baseline and sustained anxiety compared to the controls, which is consistent with their heightened distress and hyperarousal clinical profiles. Emotional empathy, operationalized as synchrony between participants' and targets' distress ratings, was significantly lower in the CPTSD group, indicating diminished alignment with others' emotional experiences. Cognitive deficits were evident in the systematic underestimation of targets' anger. This study significantly contributes to the understanding of empathy deficits in CPTSD following CSA and potentially informs therapeutic strategies targeted for this population. Specifically, the findings suggest that interventions aimed at improving emotional attunement and fostering the recognition and expression of anger may enhance social functioning and therapeutic outcomes for women with complex trauma stemming from childhood sexual abuse.
AB - Complex post-traumatic stress disorder (CPTSD) stemming from childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is characterized by profound interpersonal difficulties in later life. Despite the crucial role empathy plays in social functioning, the specific deficits in emotional and cognitive empathy in CPTSD remain understudied. This study employs a rich, naturalistic empathy task to investigate empathic responses among women with CPTSD following childhood sexual abuse. Female participants with CPTSD following CSA and female controls viewed autobiographical videos containing emotional pain, while providing dynamic ratings of their own distress and post-viewing assessments of their own and the targets' emotions. The results showed that the CPTSD group had higher levels of baseline and sustained anxiety compared to the controls, which is consistent with their heightened distress and hyperarousal clinical profiles. Emotional empathy, operationalized as synchrony between participants' and targets' distress ratings, was significantly lower in the CPTSD group, indicating diminished alignment with others' emotional experiences. Cognitive deficits were evident in the systematic underestimation of targets' anger. This study significantly contributes to the understanding of empathy deficits in CPTSD following CSA and potentially informs therapeutic strategies targeted for this population. Specifically, the findings suggest that interventions aimed at improving emotional attunement and fostering the recognition and expression of anger may enhance social functioning and therapeutic outcomes for women with complex trauma stemming from childhood sexual abuse.
KW - Childhood sexual abuse
KW - Cognitive empathy
KW - Complex PTSD
KW - Distress
KW - Emotional synchrony
KW - Empathy deficits
KW - Naturalistic empathy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105008884268&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jad.2025.119629
DO - 10.1016/j.jad.2025.119629
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C2 - 40499829
AN - SCOPUS:105008884268
SN - 0165-0327
VL - 389
JO - Journal of Affective Disorders
JF - Journal of Affective Disorders
M1 - 119629
ER -