4.7 Article

Neural signatures of parental empathic responses to imagined suffering of their adolescent child

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 232, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117886

Keywords

Empathy; Parenting; Parent-child relationship; Affective responses; Pain; Perspective taking; Mentalizing

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [453-15-006]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant [707404]
  3. Sara van Dam z.l. Foundation, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts Sciences

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This study found that parents reported higher levels of distress when imagining suffering for their own child, with increased brain activity in specific regions supporting cognitive empathy and affective empathy. Parental caregiving behavior did not correlate with activity in empathy networks, but parents perceived as less caring exhibited increased neural activity when imagining their own child suffering.
Empathy is deemed indispensable for sensitive caregiving. Neuroimaging studies have identified canonical empathy networks consisting of regions supporting cognitive and affective aspects of empathy. However, not much is known about how these regions support empathy towards one's own offspring and how this neural activity relates to parental caregiving. We introduce a novel task to assess affective and neural responses to the suffering of one's own adolescent child. While in the scanner, 60 parents (n = 35 mothers, n = 25 fathers) were confronted with unpleasant situations involving their own child, an unfamiliar child, and themselves. Parents were asked to vividly imagine these situations and indicate their levels of distress. Parents reported higher levels of distress when imagining suffering for their own child relative to an unfamiliar child or themselves. Neuroimaging results showed increased activation within the cognitive empathy network (i.e., temporoparietal junction, dorsomedial and ventromedial prefrontal cortex) when contrasting suffering of one's own child versus an unfamiliar child or the self. The task also engaged regions of the affective empathy network (i.e., anterior insula and anterior midcingulate cortex), which was however not modulated by whether suffering was for the self, one's own child, or an unfamiliar child. Parental care did not co-vary with activity in the empathy networks, but parents who were perceived as less caring exhibited increased activity in anterior prefrontal regions when imagining their own child suffering. These results provide new insights into neural processes supporting parental empathy, highlighting the importance of regions in the cognitive empathy network when confronted with the suffering of their own adolescent child, and suggest that additional (i.e., emotion regulation) networks may be relevant for parental caring behavior in daily life.

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