Abstract

Recent evidence has demonstrated that empathic responses are modulated by social power. However, there is little consensus regarding how an observer’s social power can shape empathic responses. The present study used event-related potentials (ERPs) to explore the role of social power in empathic responses. Specifically, to induce the sense of power, we asked participants to recall a past situation in which they were in a position of power (high power prime) or a situation in which they were lacking power (low power prime). Afterward, we used ERPs to record the responses when participants were viewing pictures depicting other people in painful or non-painful situations. The results revealed that larger amplitudes in the earlier P2 and the later P3 components in response to painful stimuli than to non-painful stimuli. Besides, participants primed with high power only showed larger P1 amplitudes than participants primed with low power. The present study extended previous studies by showing that social power tends to enhance the early sensory processing of both painful and non-painful stimuli, instead of directly decreasing the level of empathic responses to others’ pain.

Highlights

  • Empathy refers to the ability to share and understand the emotional states of others (Decety and Jackson, 2004)

  • The results revealed that larger amplitudes in the earlier P2 and the later P3 components in response to painful stimuli than to non-painful stimuli, suggesting that painful stimuli led to robust neural responses

  • Participants primed with high power showed larger P1 amplitudes than participants primed with low power did

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Summary

Introduction

Empathy refers to the ability to share and understand the emotional states of others (Decety and Jackson, 2004). According to the “shared representations” account of empathy (De Vignemont and Singer, 2006), observing another person in a particular emotional state generates a similar emotional state in oneself Consistent with this view, brain imaging studies have demonstrated that merely observing pain in others can activate brain regions mediating affective and somatosensory pain in the observer (Decety and Jackson, 2004; Jackson et al, 2005). Recent several theories of emotions (Barrett, 2012; Mesquita and Boiger, 2014) proposed that emotions emerge from specific social interaction contexts. According to this view, each instance of any emotion is constructed by social interactions in which it takes place. It has to be pointed out that these theories do not deny that emotions are embodied, they just stress that emotions are situated in specific social contexts

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