Department of Psychology, Harvard University Cambridge, MA, USA ; Center for Brain Science, Harvard University Cambridge, MA, USA.
Front Psychol. 2013 Jan 9;3:576. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00576. eCollection 2012.
Studies on memory, imagination, and empathy have largely progressed in isolation. Consequently, humans' empathic tendencies to care about and help other people are considered independent of our ability to remember and imagine events. Despite this theoretical autonomy, work from across psychology, and neuroscience suggests that these cognitive abilities may be linked. In the present paper, I tentatively propose that humans' ability to vividly imagine specific events (as supported by constructive memory) may facilitate prosocial intentions and behavior. Evidence of a relationship between memory, imagination, and empathy comes from research that shows imagination influences the perceived and actual likelihood an event occurs, improves intergroup relations, and shares a neural basis with memory and empathy. Although many questions remain, this paper outlines a new direction for research that investigates the role of imagination in promoting empathy and prosocial behavior.
记忆、想象和同理心的研究在很大程度上是孤立进行的。因此,人们关心和帮助他人的同理心倾向被认为与我们记忆和想象事件的能力无关。尽管存在这种理论上的自主性,但来自心理学和神经科学的研究表明,这些认知能力可能是相关的。在本文中,我初步提出,人类生动想象特定事件的能力(由建设性记忆支持)可能有助于促进亲社会的意图和行为。记忆、想象和同理心之间关系的证据来自于研究,该研究表明想象会影响人们对事件发生的可能性的感知和实际感知,改善群体间关系,并与记忆和同理心具有相同的神经基础。尽管仍有许多问题存在,但本文为研究想象在促进同理心和亲社会行为方面的作用勾勒出了一个新的方向。