# From empathy to creative output: exploring the emotional–cognitive mechanisms of digital creativity

**Authors:** Tianshu Li, Qizhe Zhao, Na Yang, Yaocheng Tian, Zhenwen Zheng, Zhixin Guo, Caisheng Liao

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1749596 · 2026-02-25

## TL;DR

This study explores how empathy and cognitive factors like flexibility influence digital creativity, showing empathy enhances creativity indirectly through cognitive processes.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a unified emotional-cognitive model of digital creativity, showing empathy's indirect role through cognitive flexibility.

## Key findings

- Digital empathy enhances creativity indirectly via cognitive flexibility.
- Digital self-efficacy strengthens the empathy-flexibility link.
- Empathy functions as a cognitive rather than purely emotional driver in digital creativity.

## Abstract

The rapid advancement of digital technologies has reshaped how creativity is fostered, especially in fields such as education, business, and the creative industries. However, the mechanisms behind digital creativity remain underexplored, particularly regarding the roles of emotional and cognitive factors. Among these factors, empathy has long been considered a key driver of creativity; however, it remains unclear whether this mechanism still applies in digital environments. Guided by self-determination theory, this study proposes and tests an integrative model linking digital empathy, cognitive flexibility, digital self-efficacy, and digital creativity. Two complementary studies were conducted: a quasi-experimental study with university students and a survey with employees in digital workplaces. Structural equation modeling shows that digital empathy does not directly predict digital creativity but enhances it indirectly through cognitive flexibility. Digital self-efficacy strengthens the link between empathy and flexibility, amplifying this indirect effect. These results provide empirical evidence consistent with an emotional–cognitive pathway associated with digital creativity and suggest that empathy may function as a cognitively relevant factor rather than solely as an emotional response. By integrating emotion, cognition, and competence within a unified framework, this research extends existing creativity theory to digital contexts and offers practical insights for fostering innovation in educational and organizational settings.

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975487/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12975487