Sunday, October 1, 2017

Mammalian empathy: behavioral manifestions and neural basis

Continuing the last post, another article on the topic. The abstract:

"Recent research on empathy in humans and other mammals seeks to dissociate emotional and cognitive empathy. These forms, however, remain interconnected in evolution, across species and at the level of neural mechanisms. New data have facilitated the development of empathy models such as the perception–action model (PAM) and mirror-neuron theories. According to the PAM, the emotional states of others are understood through personal, embodied representations that allow empathy and accuracy to increase based on the observer's past experiences. In this Review, we discuss the latest evidence from studies carried out across a wide range of species, including studies on yawn contagion, consolation, aid-giving and contagious physiological affect, and we summarize neuroscientific data on representations related to another's state."

From the conclusion:


"Shared representations of affective states are activated from the top down in more
cognitive forms of empathy, which recruit additional executive and visuospatial processes. However, the literature overestimates distinctions between emotional and cognitive empathy, following traditional practices to dichotomize in science and philosophy. Despite each having unique features, affective and cognitive empathy both require access to the shared representations of emotion that provide simulations with content and an embodied meaning."

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.