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      On the distinction of empathic and vicarious emotions

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          Abstract

          In the introduction to the special issue “The Neural Underpinnings of Vicarious Experience” the editors state that one “may feel embarrassed when witnessing another making a social faux pas”. In our commentary we address this statement and ask whether this example introduces a vicarious or an empathic form of embarrassment. We elaborate commonalities and differences between these two forms of emotional experiences and discuss their underlying mechanisms. We suggest that both, vicarious and empathic emotions, originate from the simulation processes mirroring and mentalizing that depend on anchoring and adjustment. We claim the term “empathic emotion” to be reserved exclusively for incidents where perceivers and social targets have shared affective experience, whereas “vicarious emotion” offers a wider scope and also includes non-shared affective experiences. Both are supposed to be highly functional in social interactions.

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          Most cited references22

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          Empathy for pain involves the affective but not sensory components of pain.

          Our ability to have an experience of another's pain is characteristic of empathy. Using functional imaging, we assessed brain activity while volunteers experienced a painful stimulus and compared it to that elicited when they observed a signal indicating that their loved one--present in the same room--was receiving a similar pain stimulus. Bilateral anterior insula (AI), rostral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), brainstem, and cerebellum were activated when subjects received pain and also by a signal that a loved one experienced pain. AI and ACC activation correlated with individual empathy scores. Activity in the posterior insula/secondary somatosensory cortex, the sensorimotor cortex (SI/MI), and the caudal ACC was specific to receiving pain. Thus, a neural response in AI and rostral ACC, activated in common for "self" and "other" conditions, suggests that the neural substrate for empathic experience does not involve the entire "pain matrix." We conclude that only that part of the pain network associated with its affective qualities, but not its sensory qualities, mediates empathy.
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            Remembering the past to imagine the future: the prospective brain.

            A rapidly growing number of recent studies show that imagining the future depends on much of the same neural machinery that is needed for remembering the past. These findings have led to the concept of the prospective brain; an idea that a crucial function of the brain is to use stored information to imagine, simulate and predict possible future events. We suggest that processes such as memory can be productively re-conceptualized in light of this idea.
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              The social neuroscience of empathy.

              The phenomenon of empathy entails the ability to share the affective experiences of others. In recent years social neuroscience made considerable progress in revealing the mechanisms that enable a person to feel what another is feeling. The present review provides an in-depth and critical discussion of these findings. Consistent evidence shows that sharing the emotions of others is associated with activation in neural structures that are also active during the first-hand experience of that emotion. Part of the neural activation shared between self- and other-related experiences seems to be rather automatically activated. However, recent studies also show that empathy is a highly flexible phenomenon, and that vicarious responses are malleable with respect to a number of factors--such as contextual appraisal, the interpersonal relationship between empathizer and other, or the perspective adopted during observation of the other. Future investigations are needed to provide more detailed insights into these factors and their neural underpinnings. Questions such as whether individual differences in empathy can be explained by stable personality traits, whether we can train ourselves to be more empathic, and how empathy relates to prosocial behavior are of utmost relevance for both science and society.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Front Hum Neurosci
                Front Hum Neurosci
                Front. Hum. Neurosci.
                Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1662-5161
                15 May 2013
                2013
                : 7
                : 196
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Social Neuroscience Lab, Department of Psychiatry, Philipps-University Marburg Marburg, Germany
                [2] 2Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Philipps-University Marburg Marburg, Germany
                Author notes

                Edited by: Peter G. Enticott, Monash University, Australia

                Reviewed by: Ida Momennejad, Humboldt University Berlin, Germany; Grit Hein, University of Zurich, Switzerland

                *Correspondence: Sören Krach and Frieder M. Paulus, Social Neuroscience Lab, Department of Psychiatry, Philipps-University Marburg, Rudolf-Bultmann-Straße 8, D-35039 Marburg, Germany. e-mail: krachs@ 123456med.uni-marburg.de ; paulusf@ 123456med.uni-marburg.de
                Article
                10.3389/fnhum.2013.00196
                3654216
                23720621
                998cafd8-bc48-4448-9784-2a173d8dc516
                Copyright © 2013 Paulus, Müller-Pinzler, Westermann and Krach.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and subject to any copyright notices concerning any third-party graphics etc.

                History
                : 20 February 2013
                : 27 April 2013
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 42, Pages: 5, Words: 4363
                Categories
                Neuroscience
                Hypothesis and Theory Article

                Neurosciences
                vicarious emotion,empathic emotion,anchoring,adjustment,vicarious embarrassment,mentalizing,mirroring,empathy

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