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Shelley Dean Kilpatrick

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  8
Citations -  2318

Shelley Dean Kilpatrick is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Empathy & Empathic accuracy. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 2088 citations. Previous affiliations of Shelley Dean Kilpatrick include National Institutes of Health.

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Is gratitude a moral affect

TL;DR: The personality and social factors that are associated with gratitude are consistent with a conceptualization of gratitude as an affect that is relevant to people's cognitions and behaviors in the moral domain.
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Vengefulness: Relationships with Forgiveness, Rumination, Well-Being, and the Big Five

TL;DR: This paper found that vengefulness at baseline was negatively related to change in forgiving throughout an 8-week follow-up and was negatively associated with Agreeableness and positively associated with Neuroticism.
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Empathic accuracy and accommodative behavior among newly married couples

TL;DR: In this paper, an established method for assessing empathic accuracy was used to examine the consequences of accurate understanding during the early years of marriage and found that levels of empathic understanding reliably declined following the first year of marriage.
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Narcissists as “Victims”: The Role of Narcissism in the Perception of Transgressions

TL;DR: The authors found that narcissism (particularly in its exploitiveness/entitlement dimension) was associated positively with the number and frequency of transgressions that respondents reported, and may be particularly useful for explaining why narcissistic people report higher rates of interpersonal transgressions in their daily lives.
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A Systematic Review of Spiritual and Religious Variables in Palliative Medicine, American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care, Hospice Journal, Journal of Palliative Care, and Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

TL;DR: To move the field of palliative medicine forward so appropriate guidelines for spiritual care can be developed, it is critical that good research be conducted upon which to base spiritual care in an evidence-based model.