Abstract

Empathy for pain engages both shared affective responses and self-other distinction. In this study, we addressed the highly debated question of whether neural responses previously linked to affect sharing could result from the perception of salient affective displays. Moreover, we investigated how the brain network involved in affect sharing and self-other distinction underpinned our response to a pain that is either perceived as genuine or pretended (while in fact both were acted for reasons of experimental control). We found stronger activations in regions associated with affect sharing (anterior insula [aIns] and anterior mid-cingulate cortex) as well as with affective self-other distinction (right supramarginal gyrus [rSMG]), in participants watching video clips of genuine vs. pretended facial expressions of pain. Using dynamic causal modeling, we then assessed the neural dynamics between the right aIns and rSMG in these two conditions. This revealed a reduced inhibitory effect on the aIns to rSMG connection for genuine pain compared to pretended pain. For genuine pain only, brain-to-behavior regression analyses highlighted a linkage between this inhibitory effect on the one hand, and pain ratings as well as empathic traits on the other. These findings imply that if the pain of others is genuine and thus calls for an appropriate empathic response, neural responses in the aIns indeed seem related to affect sharing and self-other distinction is engaged to avoid empathic over-arousal. In contrast, if others merely pretend to be in pain, the perceptual salience of their painful expression results in neural responses that are down-regulated to avoid inappropriate affect sharing and social support.

Highlights

  • As social beings, our own affective states are influenced by other people’s feelings and affective states

  • We focused on the right supramarginal gyrus, which has been suggested to act as a major hub selectively engaged in affective self-­other distinction (Silani et al, 2013; Steinbeis et al, 2015; Hoffmann et al, 2016; Bukowski et al, 2020)

  • The behavioral data indicated higher ratings and large effect sizes of painful feelings in others and unpleasantness in self for the genuine pain compared to the pretended pain condition

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Summary

Introduction

Our own affective states are influenced by other people’s feelings and affective states. The facial expression of pain by others acts as a distinctive cue to signal their pain to others, and results in sizeable affective responses in the observer. Certifying such responses as evidence for empathy, requires successful self-­other distinction, the ability to distinguish the affective response experienced by ourselves from the affect experienced by the other person. Studies using a wide variety of methods convergently have shown that observing others in pain engages neural responses aligning with those coding for the affective component of self-­experienced pain, with the anterior insula (aIns) and the anterior mid-c­ ingulate cortex (aMCC) being two key areas in which such an alignment has been detected (Lamm et al, 2011; Rütgen et al, 2015; Jauniaux et al, 2019; Xiong et al, 2019; Zhou et al, 2020; Fallon et al, 2020, for meta-a­ nalyses).

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