The authors in this study examined how empathic self-efficacy beliefs, self-transcendence, and agreeableness predict one's propensity to engage in any prosocial behavior across his or her time. The participants of this study included 150 men and 190 women who were aged approximately 21 years at the study’s first time or the Time 1 and at Time 2 they were approximately 25 years of age (Caprara, Alessandri, & Eisenberg, 2011). During the 2 time points, measures of pro-sociality, empathic self-efficacy beliefs, self-transcendence, and agreeableness were collected. The researcher used questionnaires to collect data from the study’s participants. The young adults were interviewed through phone calls. To motivate them, they were given small payments for their participation. In addition, the researchers sent the questionnaires through the participant’s emails. The participants returned the consent with the questionnaires. The researchers organized meetings where they could meet the study participants and received the consent’s envelopes at this time (Caprara, Alessandri, & Eisenberg, 2011). The findings of this study corroborated the study’s posited paths of relations, with the agreeableness tested in this research directly predicting self-transcendence while at the same time indirectly predicting pro-sociality and self-efficacy beliefs. Self-transcendence to prosociality and agreeableness relations were mediated by empathic self-efficacy (Caprara, Alessandri, & Eisenberg, 2011). In short terms, the researchers in this study achieved their main objectives for this study. The researchers conclude their paper by creating a need for more research on their topic. According to them, the tendency of pursuing well-being of other people may vary across various cultures and social contexts. In regard to this, researchers should increase their variables in this research for them to be able to increase the accuracy of their research. In additi