Vicarious Emotions of Fear and Pain in Rodents

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY Affective science Pub Date : 2023-08-04 DOI:10.1007/s42761-023-00198-x
Christian Keysers, Valeria Gazzola
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Abstract

Affective empathy, the ability to share the emotions of others, is an important contributor to the richness of our emotional experiences. Here, we review evidence that rodents show signs of fear and pain when they witness the fear and pain of others. This emotional contagion creates a vicarious emotion in the witness that mirrors some level of detail of the emotion of the demonstrator, including its valence and the vicinity of threats, and depends on brain regions such as the cingulate, amygdala, and insula that are also at the core of human empathy. Although it remains impossible to directly know how witnessing the distress of others feels for rodents, and whether this feeling is similar to the empathy humans experience, the similarity in neural structures suggests some analogies in emotional experience across rodents and humans. These neural homologies also reveal that feeling distress while others are distressed must serve an evolutionary purpose strong enough to warrant its stability across ~ 100 millions of years. We propose that it does so by allowing observers to set in motion the very emotions that have evolved to prepare them to deal with threats — with the benefit of triggering them socially, by harnessing conspecifics as sentinels, before the witness personally faces that threat. Finally, we discuss evidence that rodents can engage in prosocial behaviors that may be motivated by vicarious distress or reward.

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啮齿动物对恐惧和疼痛的模仿情绪
情感共鸣,即分享他人情感的能力,是丰富我们情感体验的重要因素。在这里,我们回顾了啮齿动物在目睹他人的恐惧和痛苦时会表现出恐惧和痛苦的迹象的证据。这种情绪传染会在目击者身上产生一种替代情绪,这种替代情绪在某种程度上反映了示范者情绪的细节,包括情绪的价位和威胁的邻近程度,并且依赖于扣带回、杏仁核和岛叶等脑区,而这些脑区也是人类移情的核心。虽然我们还无法直接知道啮齿类动物目睹他人痛苦的感受,也无法知道这种感受是否与人类的移情相似,但神经结构的相似性表明,啮齿类动物和人类在情感体验方面存在一些相似之处。这些神经结构的相似性还揭示出,当他人感到痛苦时,这种痛苦的感觉必须具有足够强大的进化目的,以保证其在约 1 亿年的进化过程中保持稳定。我们认为,它的作用是让观察者启动进化出的情绪,使他们做好应对威胁的准备--在目击者亲自面对威胁之前,通过利用同类作为哨兵,在社会上触发这些情绪。最后,我们将讨论啮齿类动物可能会在替代性痛苦或奖励的驱使下做出亲社会行为的证据。
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