Changes in brain activity following the voluntary control of empathy

K.C. Borja Jimenez, A.R. Abdelgabar, L. De Angelis, L.S. McKay, C. Keysers, V. Gazzola*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalSpecial issuepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)
107 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

In neuroscience, empathy is often conceived as relatively automatic. The voluntary control that people can exert on brain mechanisms that map the emotions of others onto our own emotions has received comparatively less attention. Here, we therefore measured brain activity while participants watched emotional Hollywood movies under two different instructions: to rate the main characters’ emotions by empathizing with them, or to do so while keeping a detached perspective. We found that participants yielded highly consistent and similar ratings of emotions under both conditions. Using intersubject correlation-based analyses we found that, when encouraged to empathize, participants’ brain activity in limbic (including cingulate and putamen) and somatomotor regions (including premotor, SI and SII) synchronized more during the movie than when encouraged to detach. Using intersubject functional connectivity we found that comparing the empathic and detached perspectives revealed widespread increases in functional connectivity between large scale networks. Our findings contribute to the increasing awareness that we have voluntary control over the neural mechanisms through which we process the emotions of others.
Original languageEnglish
Article number116529
Number of pages12
JournalNeuroimage
Volume216
Early online date10 Jan 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2020

Keywords

  • cognitive control
  • emotion regulation
  • intersubject correlation
  • functional connectivity
  • reappraisal
  • theory of mind

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