Everyday we vicariously experience a range of states that we observe in other people: we may “feel” embarrassed when witnessing another making a social faux pas, or we may feel sadness when we see a loved one upset. In some cases this process appears to be implicit. For instance, observing pain in others may activate pain-related neural processes but without generating an overt feeling of pain. In other cases, people report a more literal, conscious sharing of affective or somatic states and this has sometimes been described as representing an extreme form of empathy. By contrast, there appear to be some people who are limited in their ability to vicariously experience the states of others. This may be the case in several psychiatric, neurodevelopmental, and personality disorders where deficits in interpersonal understanding are observed, such as schizophrenia, autism, and psychopathy. In recent decades, neuroscientists have paid significant attention to the understanding of the “social brain,” and the way in which neural processes govern our understanding of other people. In this Research Topic, we wish to contribute towards this understanding and ask for the submission of manuscripts focusing broadly on the neural underpinnings of vicarious experience. This may include theoretical discussion, case studies, and empirical investigation using behavioural techniques, electrophysiology, brain stimulation, and neuroimaging in both healthy and clinical populations. Of specific interest will be the neural correlates of individual differences in traits such as empathy, how we distinguish between ourselves and other people, and the sensorimotor resonant mechanisms that may allow us to put ourselves in another’s shoes.
The book provides clear and accessible information that avoids anthropomorphisms, reviews the latest research from the literature, and is essential reading for neuroscientists and others studying behavior, emotion and empathy impairments, ...
Indeed, Levy-Gigi and Shamay-Tsoory (2017) found that regulation strategies chosen and applied by a partner were more effective at reducing distress than intrapersonal emotion regulation. Therefore, cognitive empathy can lead to more ...
Groping around a familiar room in the dark, or learning to read again after a traumatic brain injury; navigating a virtual landscape through an avatar, or envisioning a scene through the eyes of a character—all of these are expressions of ...
Global Perspectives on the Neural Underpinnings of Intergroup Behaviour, Ingroup Bias and Prejudice Pascal ... Vicarious experiences of pain may also recruit inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and IPL in the perceiver. Nummenmaa et al. (2008) ...
Sexual misconduct claims trail a Hollywood Mogul: Oscar-winning producer has quietly settled at least 8 complaints in 3 decades. The New York Times. October 6, pp. A1, A18. Kantrowitz, B., Wingert, P., King, P., Robbins, K. and Namuth, ...
In this volume, the contributors' state-of-the-art investigations of empathy from a social neuroscience perspective vividly illustrate the potential benefits of such cross-disciplinary integration.
Several pedagogical features help students engage with the material, including essay questions, summary and key points, and further reading. This book is accompanied by substantial online resources that are available to qualifying adopters.
... the neural mechanisms enabling and underpinning basic forms of intersubjectivity, based on partly shared brain circuits.These circuits can both allow for vicarious experience of the other as another self, while at the same time ...
... experience of that emotion (Preston & de Waal, 2002; Singer & Lamm, 2009; Zaki, Weber, Bolger & Ochsner, 2009; Zaki, 2011). The observation of similar neural activations (shared activations) during the first-hand vs. the vicarious ...
This compelling volume provides a broad and accessible overview on the rapidly developing field of social neuroscience.