The
responses on the scans were similar to those found in studies of
adults. Researchers found that children, like adults, show responses to
pain in the same areas of their brains. The research also found
additional aspects of the brain activated in children, when youngsters
saw another person intentionally hurt by another individual.
"This
study is the first to examine in young children both the neural
response to pain in others and the impact of someone causing pain to
someone else," said Jean Decety, Professor in the Departments of
Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of Chicago, who reported
the findings in the article, "Who Caused the Pain? An fMRI
Investigation of Empathy and Intentionality in Children," published in
the currrent issue of Neuropsychologia. Joining him as co-authors were University students Kalina Michalska and Yuko Aktsuki.
The programming for empathy is
something that is "hard-wired" into the brains of normal children, and
not entirely the product of parental guidance or other nurturing, said
Decety. Understanding the brain's role in responding to pain can help
researchers understand how brain impairments influence anti-social
behavior, such as bullying, he explained.
For their research, the team showed 17 typically developed
children, ages seven to 12, animated photos of people experiencing
pain, either received accidentally or inflicted intentionally. The
group included nine girls and eight boys.
While undergoing
fMRI scans, children where shown animations using three photographs of
two people whose right hands or right feet only were visible.
The photographs showed people in pain accidently caused, such
as when a heavy bowl was dropped on their hands, and situations in
which the people were hurt, such as when a person stepped intentionally
on someone's foot. They were also shown pictures without pain and
animations in which people helped someo
ne alleviate pain.
The scans showed that the parts of the brain activated when adults see pain were also triggered in children.
"Consistent
with previous functional MRI studies of pain empathy with adults, the
perception of other people in pain in children was associated with
increased hemodymamic activity in the neural circuits involved in the
processing of first-hand experience of pain, including the insula,
somatosensory cortex, anterior midcigulate cortex, periaqueductal gray
and supplementary motor area," Decety wrote.
However, when the
children saw animations of someone intentionally hurt, the regions of
the brain engaged in social interaction and moral reasoning (the
temporo-parietal junction, the paracigulate, orital medial frontal
cortices and amygdala) also were activated.
The study, which
was supported by the National Science Foundation, provides new insights
for children between childrens' perceptions of right and wrong and how
their brains process information, Decety said. "Although our study did
not tap into explicit moral judgment, perceiving an individual
intentionally harming another person is likely to elicit the awareness
of moral wrongdoing in the observer," he wrote.
Subsequent
interviews with the children showed they were aware of wrong-doing in
the animations in which someone was hurt. "Thirteen of the children
thought that the situations were unfair, and they asked about the
reason that could explain this behavior," Decety said.
Source: EurekAlert (Press Release)
Friday, 11 July 2008 09:34
Born to be kind - Is empathy hard wired in the brain
Born to be Kind - Is Empathy Hard-wired in the Brain?
Children between the ages of seven and 12 appear to be naturally
inclined to feel empathy for others in pain, according to researchers
at the University of Chicago, who used functional Magnetic Resonance
Imaging (fMRI) scans to study responses in children.
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