The Effect of Cognitive Strategies and Facial Attractiveness on Empathic Neural Responses

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Abstract

Empathy is a phenomenon that brings together both emotions and an understanding of another person. Recent studies have disentangled the mechanisms of empathy into emotional and cognitive aspects. Event-related potential (ERP) studies suggest that emotional empathy is related to the modulation of the amplitude of early ERPs, and cognitive empathy is linked to later ERPs. In the current study, we examined the influences of facial attractiveness on empathic response and the effect of cognitive strategies with setting the participants’ attention to attractiveness or pain. Participants (N= 19) viewed photos of physically attractive and unattractive men and women receiving painful stimulation. The amplitude of the N2 component measured at the frontal regions was more negative in painful stimulation compared to the non-painful, but only for attractive faces. There were no differences between painful and non-painful stimulation for unattractive faces. The amplitude of the P3 measured at the central-parietal region component was more positive in the painful condition compared to the non-painful one, but only when participants performed a pain judgment task. There were no differences in the attractiveness judgment task. This study showed that the attractiveness of a model and drawing the participants’ attention to pain constitute an essential modulator of pain empathy.

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APA

Balconi, M., Kopiś-Posiej, N., Venturella, I., Zabielska-Mendyk, E., Augustynowicz, P., & Angioletti, L. (2022). The Effect of Cognitive Strategies and Facial Attractiveness on Empathic Neural Responses. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114617

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