Literature DB >> 16799175

Is pain the price of empathy? The perception of others' pain in patients with congenital insensitivity to pain.

Nicolas Danziger1, Kenneth M Prkachin, Jean-Claude Willer.   

Abstract

Empathy is a complex form of psychological inference that enables us to understand the personal experience of another person through cognitive/evaluative and affective processes. Recent findings suggest that empathy for pain may involve a 'mirror-matching' simulation of the affective and sensory features of others' pain. Despite such evidence for a shared representation of self and other pain at the neural level, the possible influence of the observer's own sensitivity to pain upon his perception of others' pain has not been investigated yet. The aim of this study was to explore how patients with congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP), who are largely deprived of common stimulus-induced pain experiences, perceive the pain of others. Ratings of verbally presented imaginary painful situations showed that CIP patients' semantic knowledge regarding the pain of others did not differ from control subjects. Moreover, the propensity to infer pain from facial expressions was very similar between CIP patients and control subjects. On the other hand, when asked to rate pain-inducing events seen in video clips in the absence of visible or audible pain-related behaviour, CIP patients showed more variable and significantly lower pain ratings, as well as a reduction in aversive emotional responses, compared with control subjects. Interestingly, pain judgements, inferred either from facial pain expressions or from pain-inducing events, were strongly related to inter-individual differences in emotional empathy among CIP patients, while such correlation between pain judgement and empathy was not found in control subjects. The results suggest that a normal personal experience of pain is not necessarily required for perceiving and feeling empathy for others' pain. In the absence of functional somatic resonance mechanisms shaped by previous pain experiences, others' pain might be greatly underestimated, however, especially when emotional cues are lacking, unless the observer is endowed with sufficient empathic abilities to fully acknowledge the suffering experience of others in spite of his own insensitivity.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16799175     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awl155

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  33 in total

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Review 5.  Mammalian empathy: behavioural manifestations and neural basis.

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7.  Affective response to a loved one's pain: insula activity as a function of individual differences.

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8.  Putting pain assessment into practice: why is it so painful?

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Review 9.  Neurobiology of empathy and callousness: implications for the development of antisocial behavior.

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10.  Rare human nerve growth factor-β mutation reveals relationship between C-afferent density and acute pain evaluation.

Authors:  Irene Perini; Mitra Tavakoli; Andrew Marshall; Jan Minde; India Morrison
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2016-05-04       Impact factor: 2.714

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