移情
心理学
内群和外群
亲社会行为
意识的神经相关物
脑岛
集体偏爱
功能磁共振成像
扣带回前部
前额叶皮质
社会心理学
社会神经科学
社会团体
发展心理学
社会认知
社会认同理论
神经科学
认知
作者
Vani A. Mathur,Tokiko Harada,Trixie Lipke,Joan Y. Chiao
出处
期刊:NeuroImage
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2010-03-18
卷期号:51 (4): 1468-1475
被引量:379
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.03.025
摘要
A central evolutionary challenge for social groups is uniting a heterogeneous set of individuals towards common goals. One means by which social groups form and endure is by endowing group members with extraordinary prosocial proclivities, such as ingroup love, towards other group members. Here we examined the neural basis of extraordinary empathy and altruistic motivation in African-American and Caucasian-American individuals using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Our results indicate that empathy for ingroup members is neurally distinct from empathy for humankind, more generally. People showed greater response within anterior cingulate cortex and bilateral insula when observing the suffering of others, but African-American individuals additionally recruit medial prefrontal cortex when observing the suffering of members of their own social group. Moreover, neural activity within medial prefrontal cortex in response to pain expressed by ingroup relative to outgroup members predicted greater empathy and altruistic motivation for one's ingroup, suggesting that neurocognitive processes associated with self identity underlie extraordinary empathy and altruistic motivation for members of one's own social group. Taken together, our findings reveal distinct neural mechanisms of empathy and altruistic motivation in an intergroup context and may serve as a foundation for future research investigating the neural bases of intergroup prosociality, more broadly construed.
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