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Empathic Responsiveness in Amygdala and Anterior Cingulate Cortex in Youths with Psychopathic Traits.

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TLDR
Youths with psychopathic traits show less responsiveness in regions implicated in the affective response to another's pain as the perceived intensity of this pain increases, and this reduced responsiveness appears to predict symptom severity.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Psychopathic traits are associated with increases in antisocial behaviors such as aggression and are characterized by reduced empathy for others' distress. This suggests that psychopathic traits may also impair empathic pain sensitivity. However, whether psychopathic traits affect responses to the pain of others versus the self has not been previously assessed. METHOD: We used whole-brain functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure neural activation in 14 adolescents with oppositional defiant disorder or conduct disorder and psychopathic traits, as well as 21 healthy controls matched on age, gender, and intelligence. Activation in structures associated with empathic pain perception was assessed as adolescents viewed photographs of pain-inducing injuries. Adolescents imagined either that the body in each photograph was their own or that it belonged to another person. Behavioral and neuroimaging data were analyzed using random-effects analysis of variance. RESULTS: Youths with psychopathic traits showed reduced activity within regions associated with empathic pain as the depicted pain increased. These regions included rostral anterior cingulate cortex, ventral striatum (putamen), and amygdala. Reductions in amygdala activity particularly occurred when the injury was perceived as occurring to another. Empathic pain responses within both amygdala and rostral anterior cingulate cortex were negatively correlated with the severity of psychopathic traits as indexed by PCL:YV scores. CONCLUSIONS: Youths with psychopathic traits show less responsiveness in regions implicated in the affective response to another's pain as the perceived intensity of this pain increases. Moreover, this reduced responsiveness appears to predict symptom severity. Language: en

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The neurobiology of psychopathic traits in youths

TL;DR: Children with conduct disorder have psychopathic traits, which consist of a callous–unemotional component and an impulsive–antisocial component, which are associated with two core impairments.
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Empathy as a driver of prosocial behaviour: highly conserved neurobehavioural mechanisms across species.

TL;DR: This paper integrates the perspectives of evolution, animal behaviour, developmental psychology, and social and clinical neuroscience to elucidate the understanding of the proximate mechanisms underlying empathy, focusing on processing of signals of distress and need, and their relation to prosocial behaviour.
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An fMRI study of affective perspective taking in individuals with psychopathy: imagining another in pain does not evoke empathy.

TL;DR: Patterns of brain activation and effective connectivity associated with differential perspective-taking provide a better understanding of empathy dysfunction in psychopathy, and have the potential to inform intervention programs for this complex clinical problem.
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Empathy and Its Discontents

TL;DR: Compassion is distinct from empathy in its neural instantiation and its behavioral consequences and is a better prod to moral action, particularly in the modern world the authors live in.
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Mediation of the relationship between callous-unemotional traits and proactive aggression by amygdala response to fear among children with conduct problems

TL;DR: Proactive aggression in youths with CU traits is linked to hypoactive amygdala responses to emotional distress cues, consistent with theories that externalizing behaviors in youngsters with these traits stem from deficient empathic responses to distress.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Empathy for Pain Involves the Affective but not Sensory Components of Pain

TL;DR: Only that part of the pain network associated with its affective qualities, but not its sensory qualities, mediates empathy, suggesting that the neural substrate for empathic experience does not involve the entire "pain matrix".
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Optimal experimental design for event-related fMRI.

TL;DR: A quantitative analysis of the relative efficiency afforded by different event‐related experimental designs shows that statistical efficiency falls off dramatically as the ISI gets sufficiently short, if the ISI is kept fixed for all trials, but improves monotonically with decreasing mean ISI.
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Meta-analytic evidence for common and distinct neural networks associated with directly experienced pain and empathy for pain

TL;DR: It is concluded that social neuroscience paradigms provide reliable and accurate insights into complex social phenomena such as empathy and that meta-analyses of previous studies are a valuable tool in this endeavor.
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The Neural Substrate of Human Empathy: Effects of Perspective-taking and Cognitive Appraisal

TL;DR: The view that humans' responses to the pain of others can be modulated by cognitive and motivational processes, which influence whether observing a conspecific in need of help will result in empathic concern, an important instigator for helping behavior, is supported.
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