In the introduction to the special issue “The Neural Underpinnings of Vicarious Experience ” the editors state that one “may feel embarrassed when witnessing another making a social faux pas”. In our commentary we address this statement and ask whether this example introduces a vicarious or an empathic form of embarrassment. We elaborate commonalities and differences between these two forms of emotional experiences and discuss their underlying mechanisms. We suggest that both, vicarious and empathic emotions, originate from the simulation processesmirroring andmentalizing that depend on anchoring and adjustment. We claim the term “empathic emotion ” to be reserved exclusively for incidents where perceivers and social targets have shared aff...
AbstractIn the last decade, the phenomenon of empathy has received widespread attention by the field...
We often empathically share the states of others. The discovery of 'mirror neurons' suggested a neur...
Feeling empathy is something that happens, an experience we can remember once we have had it, or an ...
People vicariously experience embarrassment when observing others ’ public pratfalls or etiquette vi...
Empathic embarrassment is an emotional state that belongs to the self-conscious category of emotions...
Embarrassment is a so called social emotion arising during the interaction with our surrounding soci...
Everyday we vicariously experience a range of states that we observe in other people: we may "feel" ...
We examined an account of vicarious shame that explains how people can experience a self-conscious e...
A vicarious experience is an empathetic state in response to the observation of others ’ sensations,...
Empathy, the ability to vicariously experience and to understand the affect of other people, is fund...
In recent decades there has been an explosion of empirical research into the social cognitive proces...
What makes one individual’s experience vicarious is that it is both similar to, and caused by, anoth...
We often empathically share the states of others. The discovery of 'mirror neurons' suggested a neur...
The neuroscience of empathy has enormously expanded in the past two decades, thereby making instrume...
A recent review on facial mimicry concludes that emotional mimicry is less ubiquitous than has been ...
AbstractIn the last decade, the phenomenon of empathy has received widespread attention by the field...
We often empathically share the states of others. The discovery of 'mirror neurons' suggested a neur...
Feeling empathy is something that happens, an experience we can remember once we have had it, or an ...
People vicariously experience embarrassment when observing others ’ public pratfalls or etiquette vi...
Empathic embarrassment is an emotional state that belongs to the self-conscious category of emotions...
Embarrassment is a so called social emotion arising during the interaction with our surrounding soci...
Everyday we vicariously experience a range of states that we observe in other people: we may "feel" ...
We examined an account of vicarious shame that explains how people can experience a self-conscious e...
A vicarious experience is an empathetic state in response to the observation of others ’ sensations,...
Empathy, the ability to vicariously experience and to understand the affect of other people, is fund...
In recent decades there has been an explosion of empirical research into the social cognitive proces...
What makes one individual’s experience vicarious is that it is both similar to, and caused by, anoth...
We often empathically share the states of others. The discovery of 'mirror neurons' suggested a neur...
The neuroscience of empathy has enormously expanded in the past two decades, thereby making instrume...
A recent review on facial mimicry concludes that emotional mimicry is less ubiquitous than has been ...
AbstractIn the last decade, the phenomenon of empathy has received widespread attention by the field...
We often empathically share the states of others. The discovery of 'mirror neurons' suggested a neur...
Feeling empathy is something that happens, an experience we can remember once we have had it, or an ...