移情
心理学
脑岛
感觉
扣带回前部
感知
意识的神经相关物
神经影像学
情感(语言学)
大脑活动与冥想
扣带皮质
神经科学
认知心理学
脑电图
认知
社会心理学
沟通
中枢神经系统
作者
Philip L. Jackson,Andrew N. Meltzoff,Jean Decety
出处
期刊:NeuroImage
[Elsevier]
日期:2004-11-16
卷期号:24 (3): 771-779
被引量:1226
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.09.006
摘要
To what extent do we share feelings with others? Neuroimaging investigations of the neural mechanisms involved in the perception of pain in others may cast light on one basic component of human empathy, the interpersonal sharing of affect. In this fMRI study, participants were shown a series of still photographs of hands and feet in situations that are likely to cause pain, and a matched set of control photographs without any painful events. They were asked to assess on-line the level of pain experienced by the person in the photographs. The results demonstrated that perceiving and assessing painful situations in others was associated with significant bilateral changes in activity in several regions notably, the anterior cingulate, the anterior insula, the cerebellum, and to a lesser extent the thalamus. These regions are known to play a significant role in pain processing. Finally, the activity in the anterior cingulate was strongly correlated with the participants' ratings of the others' pain, suggesting that the activity of this brain region is modulated according to subjects' reactivity to the pain of others. Our findings suggest that there is a partial cerebral commonality between perceiving pain in another individual and experiencing it oneself. This study adds to our understanding of the neurological mechanisms implicated in intersubjectivity and human empathy.
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