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共同受苦,共同联结:分享痛苦经历时大脑间的同步和相互情感共鸣。

Suffer together, bond together: Brain-to-brain synchronization and mutual affective empathy when sharing painful experiences.

机构信息

School of Psychology, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China; Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Affective and Social Cognitive Science, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China.

Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.

出版信息

Neuroimage. 2021 Sep;238:118249. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118249. Epub 2021 Jun 8.

Abstract

Previous behavioral studies have shown that sharing painful experiences can strengthen social bonds and promote mutual prosociality, yet the neural mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain unclear. We hypothesized that sharing a painful experience induces brain-to-brain synchronization and mutual empathy for each other's pain between pain-takers and pain-observers, which then leads to enhanced social bonding. To test this hypothesis, we adopted an electroencephalographic (EEG) hyper-scanning technique to assess neuronal and behavioral activity during a Pain-Sharing task in which high- or low-intensity pain stimulation was randomly delivered to one participant of a dyad on different experimental trials. Single-brain analysis showed that sensorimotor α-oscillation power was suppressed more when expecting high-intensity pain than when expecting low-intensity pain similarly for self-directed or partner-directed pain. Dual-brain analysis revealed that expecting high-intensity pain induced greater brain-to-brain synchronization of sensorimotor α-oscillation phases between pain-takers and pain-observers than did expecting low-intensity pain. Mediation analysis further revealed that brain-to-brain synchronization of sensorimotor α-oscillations mediated the effects of pain-stimulation intensity on mutual affective sharing for partner-directed pain. This mutual affective empathy during the task predicted the social bonding, as indexed by prosocial inclinations measured after the task. These results support the hypothesis that sharing a painful experience triggers emotional resonance between pairs of individuals through brain-to-brain synchronization of neuronal α-oscillations recorded over the sensorimotor cortex, and this emotional resonance further strengthens social bonds and motivates prosocial behavior within pairs of individuals.

摘要

先前的行为研究表明,分享痛苦的经历可以增强社会联系,促进相互的亲社会行为,但这种现象背后的神经机制仍不清楚。我们假设,在一个痛苦体验共享任务中,体验者和观察者会产生大脑之间的同步,相互感同身受对方的痛苦,从而增强社会联系。为了验证这一假设,我们采用了脑电图(EEG)超扫描技术,在该任务中,在不同的实验试次中,对双体中的一个参与者随机给予高或低强度的疼痛刺激。单脑分析显示,当预期高强度疼痛时,感觉运动α振荡功率的抑制比预期低强度疼痛时更强,无论是自我导向还是伙伴导向的疼痛。双脑分析显示,当预期高强度疼痛时,体验者和观察者之间的感觉运动α振荡相位的大脑间同步性大于预期低强度疼痛时。中介分析进一步表明,感觉运动α振荡的大脑间同步性介导了疼痛刺激强度对伙伴导向疼痛的相互情感共享的影响。任务期间的这种相互情感同理心预测了社会联系,这可以通过任务后测量的亲社会倾向来衡量。这些结果支持了这样一种假设,即分享痛苦的经历通过记录在感觉运动皮层上的神经元α振荡的大脑间同步触发了个体之间的情感共鸣,而这种情感共鸣进一步增强了个体之间的社会联系,并激发了亲社会行为。

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