安慰剂镇痛并不会减少以躯体感觉特定方式对他人痛苦的自然描述的同理心。

Cerebral cortex communications Pub Date : 2021-06-02 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1093/texcom/tgab039
Helena Hartmann, Federica Riva, Markus Rütgen, Claus Lamm
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摘要

共享表征假设,共享他人的疼痛会招募在第一手疼痛期间也参与其中的潜在大脑功能。至关重要的是,这方面的直接因果证据主要表现为情感疼痛处理,而体感过程对移情的贡献仍然存在争议。然而,这种争议可以用实验范式来解释,这些范式没有将注意力集中在特定的身体部位,或者没有对他人的疼痛进行自然主义的描述。在这项预先注册的功能性磁共振成像研究中,我们旨在测试对第一手疼痛的因果操纵是否会以体感匹配的方式影响对疼痛的自然描述的同理心。45名参与者右手接受了安慰剂镇痛诱导,并观察了其他人左手和右手疼痛的照片。我们既没有发现躯体感觉特异性调节疼痛移情的行为证据,也没有发现神经证据。然而,探索性分析揭示了安慰剂对同理心的普遍影响,以及当看到他人疼痛的右手(即与自己的安慰剂手相对应)时,双侧前脑岛的大脑活动更高。这些结果完善了我们对疼痛移情神经机制的认识,并暗示体感表征的共享似乎比情感表征的共享起到的因果作用更小。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Placebo Analgesia Does Not Reduce Empathy for Naturalistic Depictions of Others' Pain in a Somatosensory Specific Way.

The shared representations account postulates that sharing another's pain recruits underlying brain functions also engaged during first-hand pain. Critically, direct causal evidence for this was mainly shown for affective pain processing, while the contribution of somatosensory processes to empathy remains controversial. This controversy may be explained, however, by experimental paradigms that did not direct attention towards a specific body part, or that did not employ naturalistic depictions of others' pain. In this preregistered functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we aimed to test whether causal manipulation of first-hand pain affects empathy for naturalistic depictions of pain in a somatosensory-matched manner. Forty-five participants underwent a placebo analgesia induction in their right hand and observed pictures of other people's right and left hands in pain. We found neither behavioral nor neural evidence for somatosensory-specific modulation of pain empathy. However, exploratory analyses revealed a general effect of the placebo on empathy, and higher brain activity in bilateral anterior insula when viewing others' right hands in pain (i.e., corresponding to one's own placebo hand). These results refine our knowledge regarding the neural mechanisms of pain empathy, and imply that the sharing of somatosensory representations seems to play less of a causal role than the one of affective representations.

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