# In the mood of the other: emotional contagion, empathic knowledge, and intuitive diagnosis in psychiatry

**Authors:** Andrea Altobrando, Leonardo Zaninotto

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1676449 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2025-12-19

## TL;DR

The paper explores how emotional resonance and empathy contribute to intuitive psychiatric diagnosis.

## Contribution

It integrates Scheler’s emotional contagion and Stein’s empathy model to explain intuitive diagnostic processes.

## Key findings

- Emotional contagion provides a pre-reflective resonance that supports deeper empathic understanding.
- Stein’s three-stage empathy model explains how clinicians imaginatively engage with a patient’s experience.
- Combining these concepts offers a framework for intuitive diagnosis grounded in bodily and imaginative empathy.

## Abstract

In this study we critically examine the phenomenological foundations of intuitive diagnosis in Psychiatry by integrating Max Scheler’s concept of emotional contagion with Edith Stein’s three-stage model of empathy. We argue that what Scheler calls emotional contagion offers a useful pre-reflective, bodily-affective resonance that precedes and facilitates deeper empathic understanding of the subject’s experience. Then, we suggest that Stein’s analysis of empathy, which is based on a three-step process—i.e., the emergence of the other’s experience, its imaginative explication, and the final comprehensive objectification—may account for the role of imaginative empathic immersion in diagnostic assessment. This imaginative engagement, grounded in bodily co-originality, allows clinicians to apprehend the subject’s world beyond mere perceptual awareness. We contend that Scheler’s emotional contagion and Stein’s model of empathy can be productively harnessed within a comprehensive diagnostic framework to provide a raw intuitive and imaginative substrate for further cognitive elaboration.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mental disorders (MESH:D001523), paranoid (MESH:D010259), anxiety (MESH:D001007), schizophrenic (MESH:D012559), tension (MESH:D018781), pain (MESH:D010146), paranoid delusional (MESH:D012563), depressed (MESH:D003866), auditory hallucinations (MESH:D006212)
- **Species:** Livupivirus A (no rank) [taxon 1926511], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

71 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12757403/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12757403