Yes, the hot-cold empathy gap can adversely impact how people in distress or with high adverse childhood experience scores (ACEs) are treated.
What is the Hot-Cold Empathy Gap?
The hot-cold empathy gap (coined/popularized by George Loewenstein) refers to the systematic difficulty people have in predicting or appreciating how they (or others) will think, feel, and behave when in a different emotional or visceral state.
- Cold-to-hot gap (most relevant here): When calm/rational ("cold"), people underestimate how strongly "hot" states—like intense pain, fear, anger, hunger, craving, or emotional distress—will influence behavior and preferences.
- Hot-to-cold gap: When in a hot state, people underestimate how transient it is and overestimate how stable their current feelings/preferences are.
This applies both intrapersonally (your own future/past states) and interpersonally (judging others).
Impact on People in Distress
People in acute distress are often in a "hot" state (high emotional arousal, pain, trauma response, etc.). Observers or decision-makers who are in a neutral/cold state frequently:
- Underestimate the intensity of the distress and its effects on behavior.
- Undertreat pain or emotional needs — e.g., healthcare providers not currently in pain tend to under-appreciate and under-medicate patients' pain.
- Judge behaviors more harshly — viewing reactions (withdrawal, irritability, "overreactions") as character flaws rather than understandable responses to a hot state. This leads to less compassion, invalidation, or punitive responses.
Examples include family members, teachers, or therapists who are calm and fail to fully bridge the gap to the distressed person's experience.
Connection to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)
ACEs (abuse, neglect, household dysfunction, etc.) often lead to long-term heightened sensitivity to stress, altered emotion regulation, and difficulties with empathy components. Research shows mixed but relevant patterns:
- ACEs are linked to higher affective empathy (feeling others' emotions strongly, sometimes leading to personal distress/over-arousal) but lower cognitive empathy (understanding others' perspectives) in some cases.
- This can make individuals with ACEs more vulnerable to being misunderstood when in distress—they may show intense emotional responses that cold-state observers fail to appreciate.
- Caregivers, professionals, or society at large (often in cold states) may misattribute trauma-related behaviors (e.g., hypervigilance, emotional numbing, or reactivity) due to the empathy gap, leading to poorer support, stigma, or ineffective interventions.
The gap exacerbates issues because those without similar experiences struggle to simulate the "hot" internal world of someone shaped by trauma.
Real-World Consequences
- Healthcare & mental health: Undertreatment of pain or trauma symptoms.
- Social/relationships: Dismissal of distress ("just get over it"), reduced support.
- Systems: Policies or responses that don't account for visceral states (e.g., in schools, courts, or workplaces).
- It can create vicious cycles: invalidated distress leads to more isolation or escalated hot states.
Mitigations
Awareness helps. Strategies include:
- Perspective-taking exercises or vivid simulations.
- Trauma-informed practice that emphasizes emotional states.
- Direct feedback from those in distress.
- Mindfulness or experiential bridging techniques to reduce the gap.
Overall, the hot-cold empathy gap is a well-documented cognitive bias that contributes to suboptimal treatment of distressed and trauma-affected individuals by making their experiences harder for others to fully grasp in the moment.