This chapter revolves around the phenomena and neural mechanisms underlying the human capability to empathize with the actions, emotions, and feelings of other individuals. Special attention is paid to the neural activity induced by observation and imagination of others' pain. It will be shown that representing others' pain brings about the activation of neural structures largely overlapping with those activated during the experience of pain on oneself and that neural structures involved in both emotional and sensorimotor processing may be recruited during empathy for pain
The phenomenon of empathy has been fascinating laymen and scholars for centuries and has recently be...
When people witness or imagine the pain of another person, their nervous system may react as if they...
In the representationalist framework generally adopted in cognitive neuroscience, pain is conceived ...
This chapter revolves around the phenomena and neural mechanisms underlying the human capability to ...
The present work revolves around the phenomena and neural mechanisms underlying the human capability...
Current neuroscientific models of empathy postulate that attending to others’ emotions and feelings ...
Pain is a salient, aversive sensation which motivates avoidance, but also has a strong social signal...
The perception and evaluation of other’s pain has been largely used in social neuroscience as a para...
Empathy - the ability to share the feelings of others - is fundamental to our emotional and social l...
Empathy, a defining feature of human interpersonal interaction, is a complex psychological construct...
To what extent do we share feelings with others? Neuroimaging investigations of the neural mechanism...
Our ability to have an experience of another's pain is characteristic of empathy. Using functional i...
First- and third-person experiences of bodily sensations, like pain and touch, recruit overlapping n...
How do we empathize with another’s pain? According to mirror-matching resonance models of empathy, t...
Neuroimaging studies report that the experience of observing or imagining the pain of others is mapp...
The phenomenon of empathy has been fascinating laymen and scholars for centuries and has recently be...
When people witness or imagine the pain of another person, their nervous system may react as if they...
In the representationalist framework generally adopted in cognitive neuroscience, pain is conceived ...
This chapter revolves around the phenomena and neural mechanisms underlying the human capability to ...
The present work revolves around the phenomena and neural mechanisms underlying the human capability...
Current neuroscientific models of empathy postulate that attending to others’ emotions and feelings ...
Pain is a salient, aversive sensation which motivates avoidance, but also has a strong social signal...
The perception and evaluation of other’s pain has been largely used in social neuroscience as a para...
Empathy - the ability to share the feelings of others - is fundamental to our emotional and social l...
Empathy, a defining feature of human interpersonal interaction, is a complex psychological construct...
To what extent do we share feelings with others? Neuroimaging investigations of the neural mechanism...
Our ability to have an experience of another's pain is characteristic of empathy. Using functional i...
First- and third-person experiences of bodily sensations, like pain and touch, recruit overlapping n...
How do we empathize with another’s pain? According to mirror-matching resonance models of empathy, t...
Neuroimaging studies report that the experience of observing or imagining the pain of others is mapp...
The phenomenon of empathy has been fascinating laymen and scholars for centuries and has recently be...
When people witness or imagine the pain of another person, their nervous system may react as if they...
In the representationalist framework generally adopted in cognitive neuroscience, pain is conceived ...