TY - JOUR
T1 - Shared pain
T2 - From empathy to synaesthesia
AU - Fitzgibbon, Bernadette M.
AU - Giummarra, Melita J.
AU - Georgiou-Karistianis, Nellie
AU - Enticott, Peter G.
AU - Bradshaw, John L.
PY - 2010/3
Y1 - 2010/3
N2 - This paper reviews the current literature on "empathy for pain" , the ability to understand pain observed in another person, in the context of a newly documented form of pain empathy " synaesthesia for pain" In synaesthesia for pain a person not only empathises with another's pain but experiences the observed or imagined pain as if it was their own. Neural mechanisms potentially involved in synaesthesia for pain include " mirror systems": neural systems active both when observing an action, or experiencing an emotion or sensation and when executing the same action, or personally experiencing the same emotion or sensation. For example, we may know that someone is in pain in part because observation activates similar neural networks as if we were experiencing that pain ourselves. We propose that synaesthesia for pain may be the result of painful and/or traumatic experiences causing disinhibition in the mirror system underlying empathy for pain. We will discuss this theory in the context of a documented group of amputees who experience synaesthesia for pain in phantom limbs.
AB - This paper reviews the current literature on "empathy for pain" , the ability to understand pain observed in another person, in the context of a newly documented form of pain empathy " synaesthesia for pain" In synaesthesia for pain a person not only empathises with another's pain but experiences the observed or imagined pain as if it was their own. Neural mechanisms potentially involved in synaesthesia for pain include " mirror systems": neural systems active both when observing an action, or experiencing an emotion or sensation and when executing the same action, or personally experiencing the same emotion or sensation. For example, we may know that someone is in pain in part because observation activates similar neural networks as if we were experiencing that pain ourselves. We propose that synaesthesia for pain may be the result of painful and/or traumatic experiences causing disinhibition in the mirror system underlying empathy for pain. We will discuss this theory in the context of a documented group of amputees who experience synaesthesia for pain in phantom limbs.
KW - Empathy
KW - Empathy for pain
KW - Mirror systems
KW - Pain
KW - Phantom pain
KW - Synaesthesia
KW - Synaesthesia for pain
KW - Synaesthesia for touch
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77649187521&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2009.10.007
DO - 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2009.10.007
M3 - Review article
C2 - 19857517
AN - SCOPUS:77649187521
SN - 0149-7634
VL - 34
SP - 500
EP - 512
JO - Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
JF - Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews
IS - 4
ER -