Do You Feel My Pain? Racial Group Membership Modulates Empathic Neural Responses

The pain matrix including the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) mediates not only first person pain experience but also empathy for others' pain. It remains unknown, however, whether empathic neural responses of the pain matrix are modulated by racial in-group/out-group relationship. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging we demonstrate that, whereas painful stimulations applied to racial in-group faces induced increased activations in the ACC and inferior frontal/insula cortex in both Caucasians and Chinese, the empathic neural response in the ACC decreased significantly when participants viewed faces of other races. Our findings uncover neural mechanisms of an empathic bias toward racial in-group members.

[1]  Lihua Mao,et al.  Empathic neural responses to others' pain are modulated by emotional contexts , 2009, Human brain mapping.

[2]  Shihui Han,et al.  Temporal dynamic of neural mechanisms involved in empathy for pain: An event-related brain potential study , 2008, Neuropsychologia.

[3]  Jean Decety,et al.  Expertise Modulates the Perception of Pain in Others , 2007, Current Biology.

[4]  Xiaosi Gu,et al.  Attention and reality constraints on the neural processes of empathy for pain , 2007, NeuroImage.

[5]  J. Decety,et al.  A Social-Neuroscience Perspective on Empathy , 2006 .

[6]  Riitta Hari,et al.  The compassionate brain: humans detect intensity of pain from another's face. , 2006, Cerebral cortex.

[7]  J. O'Doherty,et al.  Empathic neural responses are modulated by the perceived fairness of others , 2006, Nature.

[8]  Amishi P. Jha,et al.  Viewing facial expressions of pain engages cortical areas involved in the direct experience of pain , 2005, NeuroImage.

[9]  Andrew N. Meltzoff,et al.  How do we perceive the pain of others? A window into the neural processes involved in empathy , 2005, NeuroImage.

[10]  J. O'Doherty,et al.  Empathy for Pain Involves the Affective but not Sensory Components of Pain , 2004, Science.

[11]  L. Cosmides,et al.  Perceptions of race , 2003, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[12]  James D. Johnson,et al.  Rodney King and O. J. Revisited: The Impact of Race and Defendant Empathy Induction on Judicial Decisions , 2002 .

[13]  Hillary Anger Elfenbein,et al.  On the universality and cultural specificity of emotion recognition: a meta-analysis. , 2002, Psychological bulletin.

[14]  S. Preston,et al.  Empathy: Its ultimate and proximate bases. , 2001, The Behavioral and brain sciences.

[15]  C. Daniel Batson,et al.  Is Empathy-Induced Helping Due to Self–Other Merging? , 1997 .

[16]  Mark H. Davis Empathy: A Social Psychological Approach , 1994 .

[17]  C. Batson The Altruism Question: Toward A Social-psychological Answer , 1991 .

[18]  J. Dovidio,et al.  The subtlety of White racism, arousal, and helping behavior. , 1977 .

[19]  F. D. de Waal Putting the altruism back into altruism: the evolution of empathy. , 2008, Annual review of psychology.

[20]  Claus Lamm,et al.  The Neural Substrate of Human Empathy: Effects of Perspective-taking and Cognitive Appraisal , 2007, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[21]  M. Gelfand,et al.  Converging measurement of horizontal and vertical individualism and collectivism , 1998 .

[22]  E. Harmon-Jones,et al.  Empathy and attitudes: can feeling for a member of a stigmatized group improve feelings toward the group? , 1997, Journal of personality and social psychology.