Overview
Over the last decade, research on compassion has burgeoned in the foundational, clinical, and translational sciences, proliferating an evidence base that helps us understand how compassion is engendered, strengthened, and expanded. Out of an increasing abundance of multidisciplinary and cross-disciplinary studies, progressively sophisticated understandings and measures of compassion have emerged. Here, Jennifer Mascaro presents a short theoretical review of methodologies used in the empirical study of compassion. Next, Jennifer discusses recent research that uses neuroscientific, epidemiologic, linguistics, and artificial intelligence methods to help us understand how and why compassion may emerge, even in difficult circumstances. Jennifer’s overall goal is to highlight the challenges to identifying and empirically studying the factors that facilitate or impede compassion and to discuss emerging research that has advanced new knowledge in this area. Finally, Jennifer hopes to foster discussion on what is “actionable” from this research and how to build off these findings in the future scientific study of compassion.
- SRI 2111 sessions
- June 4, 2024Garrison, New York