The power of pain: The temporal-spatial dynamics of empathy induced by body gestures and facial expressions

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROIMAGING NeuroImage Pub Date : 2025-03-15 DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2025.121148
Xin Wang , Benjamin Becker , Shelley Xiuli Tong
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Abstract

Two non-verbal pain representations, body gestures and facial expressions, can communicate pain to others and elicit our own empathic responses. However, the specific impact of these representations on neural responses of empathy, particularly in terms of temporal and spatial neural mechanisms, remains unclear. To address this issue, the present study developed a kinetic pain empathy paradigm comprising short animated videos depicting a protagonist's “real life” pain and no-pain experiences through body gestures and facial expressions. Electroencephalographic (EEG) recordings were conducted on 52 neurotypical adults; while they viewed the animations. Results from multivariate pattern, event-related potential, event-related spectrum perturbation, and source localization analyses revealed that pain expressed through facial expressions, but not body gestures, elicited increased N200 and P200 responses and activated various brain regions, i.e., the anterior cingulate cortex, insula, thalamus, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, temporal gyrus, cerebellum, and right supramarginal gyrus. Enhanced theta power with distinct spatial distributions were observed during early affective arousal and late cognitive reappraisal stages of the pain event. Multiple regression analyses showed a negative correlation between the N200 amplitude and pain catastrophizing, and a positive correlation between the P200 amplitude and autism traits. These findings demonstrate the temporal evolution of empathy evoked by dynamic pain display, highlighting the significant impact of facial expression and its association with individuals’ unique psychological traits.
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疼痛的力量:肢体手势和面部表情引发共鸣的时空动态》(The Power of Pain: The Temporal-Spatial Dynamics of Empathy Induced by Body Gestures and Facial Expressions)。
两种非语言的疼痛表征,身体姿势和面部表情,可以向他人传达疼痛并引起他们的共情反应。然而,这些表征对共情神经反应的具体影响,特别是在时间和空间神经机制方面,尚不清楚。为了解决这一问题,本研究开发了一种动态疼痛共情范式,包括通过身体手势和面部表情描绘主角“现实生活”疼痛和无疼痛体验的动画短片。对52例神经正常成人进行脑电图(EEG)记录;当他们看动画的时候。多变量模式、事件相关电位、事件相关频谱扰动和源定位分析的结果表明,通过面部表情而非肢体动作表达的疼痛引起N200和P200反应增加,并激活了大脑的多个区域,即前扣带皮层、脑岛、丘脑、腹内侧前额叶皮层、颞回、小脑和右侧边缘上回。在疼痛事件的早期情感唤醒和晚期认知重评阶段,θ波功率增强具有明显的空间分布。多元回归分析显示,N200波幅与疼痛灾难化呈负相关,P200波幅与自闭症特征呈正相关。这些发现证明了动态疼痛表现诱发共情的时间演化,突出了面部表情的显著影响及其与个体独特心理特征的关联。
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来源期刊
NeuroImage
NeuroImage 医学-核医学
CiteScore
11.30
自引率
10.50%
发文量
809
审稿时长
63 days
期刊介绍: NeuroImage, a Journal of Brain Function provides a vehicle for communicating important advances in acquiring, analyzing, and modelling neuroimaging data and in applying these techniques to the study of structure-function and brain-behavior relationships. Though the emphasis is on the macroscopic level of human brain organization, meso-and microscopic neuroimaging across all species will be considered if informative for understanding the aforementioned relationships.
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