Dynamic Empathy and Psychological Defense under Trauma: Construction and Psychometric Analysis of the DEIC Model

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Abstract

This study introduces the DEIC (Dynamic Empathy and Inner Conflict) model — a psychometric framework for assessing the capacity and suppression of empathy under the influence of psychological defense mechanisms, trauma, and internal moral conflict.Unlike traditional empathy measures, DEIC distinguishes between empathy as a latent potential and its real-world realization, which may be blocked or distorted through suppression, dissociation, or psychopathic traits.The instrument includes 122 items, covers twelve psychological scales, and computes higher-order indices such as the Realized Empathy Metric (R), Empathic Conflict Index, and Defensive Hardness.To date, over 800 anonymized profiles have been collected, revealing stable disadaptive and paradoxical patterns — including combinations of high empathy and high psychopathy.The results support the hypothesis of empathy as a dynamic and modulable function shaped by internal defenses and trauma.The DEIC model may be applied in therapy, psychological screening, and ethical modeling of behavior.

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