4.6 Article

Neural activity related to cognitive and emotional empathy in post-traumatic stress disorder

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 282, Issue -, Pages 37-45

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2014.12.049

Keywords

Explicit emotional empathy; Implicit emotional empathy; Cognitive empathy; Post-traumatic stress disorder

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The aim of this study is to evaluate the empathic ability and its functional brain correlates in posttraumatic stress disorder subjects (PTSD). Seven PTSD subjects and ten healthy controls, all present in the L'Aquila area during the earthquake of the April 2009, underwent fMRI during which they performed a modified version of the Multifaceted Empathy Test. PTSD patients showed impairments in implicit and explicit emotional empathy, but not in cognitive empathy. Brain responses during cognitive empathy showed an increased activation in patients compared to controls in the right medial frontal gyrus and the left inferior frontal gyrus. During implicit emotional empathy responses patients with PTSD, compared to controls, exhibited greater neural activity in the left pallidum and right insula; instead the control group showed an increased activation in right inferior frontal gyrus. Finally, in the explicit emotional empathy responses the PTSD group showed a reduced neural activity in the left insula and the left inferior frontal gyrus. The behavioral deficit limited to the emotional empathy dimension, accompanied by different patterns of activation in empathy related brain structures, represent a first piece of evidence of a dissociation between emotional and cognitive empathy in PTSD patients. The present findings support the idea that empathy is a multidimensional process, with different facets depending on distinct anatomical substrates. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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