| Literature DB >> 28386118 |
Korina Winter1,2, Stephanie Spengler1, Felix Bermpohl1, Tania Singer3, Philipp Kanske4.
Abstract
Aggressive, violent behaviour is a major burden and challenge for society. It has been linked to deficits in social understanding, but the evidence is inconsistent and the specifics of such deficits are unclear. Here, we investigated affective (empathy) and cognitive (Theory of Mind) routes to understanding other people in aggressive individuals. Twenty-nine men with a history of legally relevant aggressive behaviour (i.e. serious assault) and 32 control participants were tested using a social video task (EmpaToM) that differentiates empathy and Theory of Mind and completed questionnaires on aggression and alexithymia. Aggressive participants showed reduced empathic responses to emotional videos of others' suffering, which correlated with aggression severity. Theory of Mind performance, in contrast, was intact. A mediation analysis revealed that reduced empathy in aggressive men was mediated by alexithymia. These findings stress the importance of distinguishing between socio-affective and socio-cognitive deficits for understanding aggressive behaviour and thereby contribute to the development of more efficient treatments.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28386118 PMCID: PMC5429629 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-00745-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of the EmpaToM trial sequence and task overview (adapted from Kanske et al.[20]).
Figure 2EmpaToM ratings and performance: (A) empathy ratings (emotional and neutral condition), (B) compassion ratings (emotional and neutral condition), and (C) ToM and factual reasoning performance (composite score of error rates and reaction time ratings, performance scores were z-transformed and for display purpose depicted with a mean of 2) for the aggressive and the control group. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals.
EmpaToM measures analysed by means of separate repeated-measures analyses of variance.
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| p value |
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| Main Effect of Group | 7.91 | 57 | 0.152 | 0.122 | 0.075 | |
| Main Effect of Valence | 140.31 | 57 | 0.001*** | 0.711 | 3.16 | |
| Interaction | 7.910 | 57 | 0.007** | 0.122 | 0.746 | |
| Post-hoc | MeanDiff = −1.107 | 8.05 | 57 | 0.001*** | 0.124 | 0.75 |
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| Main Effect of Group | 2.119 | 57 | 0.151 | 0.036 | 0.388 | |
| Main Effect of Valence | 155.50 | 57 | 0.001*** | 0.732 | 3.327 | |
| Interaction | 3.21 | 57 | 0.079 | 0.53 | 0.47 | |
| Post-hoc | MeanDiff = 3.911 | 4.93 | 57 | 0.030* | 0.080 | 0.59 |
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| Main Effect of Group | 3.55 | 57 | 0.065 | 0.060 | 0.506 | |
| Main Effect of ToM | 0.499 | 57 | 0.483 | 0.0089 | 0.019 | |
| Interaction | 0.87 | 57 | 0.356 | 0.016 | 0.251 | |
Note: *Indicates statistical significant p-value: *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001.
Characteristics of men with a history of aggressive behaviour and controls, Buss-Perry-Aggression-Questionnaire (BPAQ), Reactive-Proactive Aggression Questionnaire (RPQ) and (Toronto-Alexithymia-Scale-26).
| Aggressive | Controls |
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| MEAN | SD | MEAN | SD | |||||
| Age | 32.172 | 7.700 | 31.706 | 5.713 | 0.276 | 61 | 0.784 | −0.068 |
| Years of education | 13.966 | 3.268 | 17.203 | 3.108 | −3.965 | 59 | 0.001*** | 1.012 |
| Intelligence | 95.552 | 11.758 | 105.438 | 10.854 | −3.415 | 59 | 0.001*** | 0.874 |
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| Physical Aggression | 36.759 | 11.716 | 21.912 | 8.346 | 5.853 | 61 | 0.001*** | −1.460 |
| Verbal Aggression | 20.345 | 5.334 | 17.618 | 6.035 | 1.885 | 61 | 0.064 | −0.479 |
| Anger | 25.690 | 8.146 | 17.118 | 5.493 | 4.958 | 61 | 0.001*** | −0.382 |
| Hostility | 27.483 | 11.134 | 18.912 | 6.820 | 3.743 | 61 | 0.001*** | −0.928 |
| Aggression Sum Score | 110.276 | 29.366 | 75.559 | 20.465 | 5.505 | 61 | 0.001*** | −1.372 |
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| Proactive Aggression | 5.929 | 5.956 | 1.794 | 2.267 | 3.737 | 60 | 0.001*** | −0.917 |
| Reactive Aggression | 11.339 | 5.052 | 4.441 | 3.751 | 6.165 | 60 | 0.001*** | −1.550 |
| Reactive-Proactive Aggr. Sum Score | 17.268 | 10.160 | 6.235 | 5.549 | 5.430 | 60 | 0.001*** | −1.348 |
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| Difficulty identifying feelings | 14.964 | 4.484 | 12.179 | 3.580 | 2.569 | 54 | 0.013** | −0.687 |
| Difficulty describing feelings | 14.107 | 3.178 | 12.536 | 4.910 | 1.422 | 54 | 0.161 | −0.380 |
| Externally oriented thinking | 17.071 | 4.422 | 13.857 | 3.894 | 2.887 | 54 | 0.006** | 0.772 |
| Alexithymia Sum Score | 46.143 | 6.969 | 38.571 | 7.089 | 4.030 | 54 | 0.001*** | 1.077 |
Note: *Indicates statistical significant p-value: *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001.
Figure 3Mediation model for the effect of aggressive behaviour on empathic responses, alexithymia is modelled as mediator.