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Specific electrophysiological components disentangle affective sharing and empathic concern in psychopathy.

Authors :
Decety J
Lewis KL
Cowell JM
Source :
Journal of neurophysiology [J Neurophysiol] 2015 Jul; Vol. 114 (1), pp. 493-504. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 May 06.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Empathic impairment is one of the hallmarks of psychopathy, a personality dimension associated with poverty in affective reactions, lack of attachment to others, and a callous disregard for the feelings, rights, and welfare of others. Neuroscience research on the relation between empathy and psychopathy has predominately focused on the affective sharing and cognitive components of empathy in forensic populations, and much less on empathic concern. The current study used high-density electroencephalography in a community sample to examine the spatiotemporal neurodynamic responses when viewing people in physical distress under two subjective contexts: one evoking affective sharing, the other, empathic concern. Results indicate that early automatic (175-275 ms) and later controlled responses (LPP 400-1,000 ms) were differentially modulated by engagement in affective sharing or empathic concern. Importantly, the late event-related potentials (ERP) component was significantly impacted by dispositional empathy and psychopathy, but the early component was not. Individual differences in dispositional empathic concern directly predicted gamma coherence (25-40 Hz), whereas psychopathy was inversely modulatory. Interestingly, significant suppression in the mu/alpha band (8-13 Hz) when perceiving others in distress was positively associated with higher trait psychopathy, which argues against the assumption that sensorimotor resonance underpins empathy. Greater scores on trait psychopathy were inversely related to subjective ratings of both empathic concern and affective sharing. Overall, the study demonstrates that neural markers of affective sharing and empathic concern to the same cues of another's distress can be distinguished at an electrophysiological level, and that psychopathy alters later time-locked differentiations and spectral coherence associated with empathic concern.<br /> (Copyright © 2015 the American Physiological Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1522-1598
Volume :
114
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neurophysiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25948868
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00253.2015