| Literature DB >> 30459570 |
Matthias Hoenen1, Katrin T Lübke1, Bettina M Pause1.
Abstract
Reduction of mu activity within the EEG is an indicator of cognitive empathy and can be generated in response to visual depictions of others in pain. The current study tested whether this brain response can be modulated by an auditory and a chemosensory context. Participants observed pictures of painful and non-painful actions while pain associated and neutral exclamations were presented (Study 1, N = 30) or while chemosensory stimuli were presented via a constant flow olfactometer (Study 2, N = 22). Chemosensory stimuli were sampled on cotton pads while donors participated in a simulated job interview (stress condition) or cycled on a stationary bike (sport condition). Pure cotton was used as a control. The social chemosignals could not be detected as odors. Activity within the 8-13 Hz band at electrodes C3, C4 (mu activity) and electrodes O1, O2 (alpha-activity) was calculated using Fast-Fourier-Transformation (FFT). As expected, suppression of power in the 8-13 Hz band was stronger when painful as compared to non-painful actions were observed (Study 1, p = 0.020; Study 2, p = 0.005). In addition, as compared to the neutral auditory and chemosensory context, painful exclamations (Study 1, p = 0.039) and chemosensory stress signals (Study 2, p = 0.014) augmented mu-/alpha suppression also in response to non-painful pictures. The studies show that processing of social threat-related information is not dominated by visual information. Rather, cognitive appraisal related to empathy can be affected by painful exclamations and subthreshold chemosensory social information.Entities:
Keywords: audio-visual; body odor; empathy; empathy for pain; mirror neuron system; mu activity; multimodal integration; social chemosignals
Year: 2018 PMID: 30459570 PMCID: PMC6232676 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2018.00243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Schematic representation of Study 1 and 2. Operationalization of variables is marked in gray (dependent variables at the top, independent variables at the bottom).
Figure 2Time course of Study 1. The sound (congruent or incongruent) started with picture onset and had a mean duration of 1.08 s (SD = 0.26).
Study 1: main effects, interactions and simple effects including the factors picture or sound.
| Main effect/interaction | Simple effects | 2nd order simple effects | Single comparisons | 2nd order simple effects | Single comparisons |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Picture: | - | - | Pain < No-Pain* | - | - |
| Picture × Laterality × Region: | Picture × Laterality in Central: | Picture in Left in Central: | Visual Pain < Visual No-Pain** | - | - |
| Picture in Right in Central: | - | - | - | ||
| Picture × Laterality in Occipital: | - | - | - | ||
| Picture × Sound × Region: | Picture × Sound in Central: | Picture in Auditory Pain in Central: | - | Sound in Visual No-Pain in Central: | Auditory Pain < Auditory No-Pain** |
| Picture in Auditory No-Pain in Central: | Visual Pain < Visual No-Pain** | Sound in Visual Pain in Central: | - | ||
| Picture × Sound in Occipital: | - | - | - | - |
*p < 0.05. **p < 0.005.
Figure 3Study 1. Suppression within the 8–13 Hz band at central (C3, C4) and occipital (O1, O2) electrode sites. Suppression at central electrode sites is always stronger when a stimulus containing pain information is present as compared to a non-painful picture paired with non-painful sound (Interaction PICTURE × SOUND × REGION: F(1,29) = 6.34, p = 0.018, = 0.179). The error bars represent the standard error. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01.
Figure 4Study 1. Correlation of mu-suppression difference for painful minus non-painful actions in the non-painful sound context with the personal distress self-ratings (Saarbrueck Personality Questionnaire on Empathy (SPQ); r = −0.378, p = 0.040). The higher participants scored on the scale, the stronger the mu suppression in response to the observation of painful relative to non-painful actions.
Figure 5Time course of Study 2. The odor (cotton control, sport control or stress condition) was presented 0.75 s prior to picture onset. A blue cross (here depicted in gray), instead of the black cross (baseline), signaled the participants to inhale until picture offset.
Figure 6Study 2. Suppression within the 8–13 Hz band collapsed across central and occipital electrode sites. The chemosensory context had an effect on suppression when non-painful pictures were observed, but not when painful pictures were observed (Interaction CHEMOSENSORY CONTEXT × PICTURE: F(2,42) = 5.12, p = 0.010, = 0.196). The error bars represent the standard error. *p < 0.05.
Study 2: main effects, interactions and simple effects including the factors picture or chemosensory context.
| Main effect/interaction | Simple effects | Single comparisons | Simple effects | Single comparisons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Picture: | - | Pain < No-Pain** | - | - |
| Chem. Context × Picture: | Chem. Context in No-Pain: | Cotton < Sport* Cotton < Stress* Sport < Stress* | Picture in Cotton: | Pain < No-Pain** |
| Chem. Context in Pain, | - | Picture in Sport: | - | |
| Picture in Stress: | - | |||
| Picture × Region: | Picture in Central, | Pain < No-Pain** | - | - |
| Picture in Occipital, | - | - | - | |
| Chem. Context × Region | Chem. Context in Central, | Stress < Sport * Stress < Cotton* | - | - |
| Chem. Context in Occipital, | - | - | - |
*p < 0.05. **p < 0.005.
Figure 7Study 2. (A) Correlation of mu-suppression difference for painful minus non-painful actions in chemosensory stress context with the fantasy self-ratings (SPQ; r = −0.490, p = 0.021). The higher participants scored on the fantasy scale, the stronger the mu suppression in response to the observation of painful relative to non-painful actions. (B) Correlation of mu-suppression difference for painful minus non-painful actions in the chemosensory stress context with the perspective taking self-ratings (r = 0.531, p = 0.011). The higher participants scored on the perspective taking scale, the weaker the mu suppression in response to the observation of painful relative to non-painful actions.