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Reduced empathic abilities are frequently observed in drug abusers. These deficits may compromise interpersonal interactions and contribute to diminished social functioning. However, previous evidence regarding empathy and addiction is behaviorally unspecific and virtually null in terms of their brain structural or functional correlates. Moreover, no previous study has investigated how empathy is affected by drugs whose consumption is particularly characterized by counter-empathic behaviors. Here, we conducted the first assessment of neurocognitive correlates of empathy for pain in dependent users (predominantly men) of smoked cocaine (SC, coca paste, n = 37). We compared their performance in the empathy task with that of two groups matched in relevant demographic variables: 24 dependent users of insufflated cocaine hydrochloride (CC) and 21 healthy controls. In addition, we explored the structural anatomy and functional connectivity (FC) correlates of empathic impairments across groups. Our results showed that, compared to CC and controls, SC users exhibited a selective reduction of empathic concern for intentional harms. These impairments were associated with lower gray matter volumes in regions subserving social cognition (i.e., right inferior parietal lobule, supramarginal and angular gyri). Furthermore, reduced empathic concern correlated with FC within affective empathy and social cognition networks, which are also linked to cognitive changes reported in addiction (i.e., inferior frontal and orbital gyri, posterior insula, supplementary motor area, cingulate cortex). Our findings suggest that chronic consumption of SC may involve reduced empathic concern and relevant neuroanatomical and FC abnormalities, which, in turn, may result in social interaction dysfunction. These results can inform theoretical and applied developments in neuropsychopharmacology.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pnpbp.2021.110328 | DOI Listing |
Alzheimers Dement
September 2025
Department of Neurology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Introduction: Antisocial behaviors occur in dementia, but the underlying neurocognitive mechanisms remain underexplored. We administered a decision-making task measuring patients' harm aversion by offering options to shock themselves or another person in exchange for money, hypothesizing that task performance would relate to antisocial behaviors and ventromedial/orbitofrontal cortex (vmPFC/OFC) atrophy.
Methods: Among 43 dementia patients (n = 23 behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia [bvFTD], n = 20 Alzheimer's disease [AD]), we used linear regressions to measure relationships between harm aversion and antisocial behavior, psychopathic personality traits, socioemotional functions, and vmPFC/OFC cortical thickness, controlling for age, sex, and cognitive dysfunction.
J Med Ethics
September 2025
Uehiro Oxford Institute, Oxford University, Oxford, UK
Warnings that large language models (LLMs) could 'dehumanise' medical decision-making often rest on an asymmetrical comparison: the idealised, attentive healthcare provider versus a clumsy, early-stage artificial intelligence (AI). This framing ignores a more urgent reality: many patients face rushed, jargon-heavy, inconsistent communication, even from skilled professionals. This response to Hildebrand's critique argues that: (1) while he worries patients lose a safeguard against family pressure, in practice, time pressure, uncertainty and fragile dynamics often prevent clinician intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Intensive Care Med
September 2025
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Los Angeles General Medical Center, Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA.
ObjectiveDeveloping effective strategies to improve shared decision-making (SDM) about potentially non-beneficial intensive care unit (ICU) treatments for patients with advanced medical illness requires understanding patients' and family members' perspectives. This study explores family members' experiences in discussing potentially non-beneficial treatments with ICU clinicians to identify factors that influenced their decision-making.MethodsSemi-structured interviews of pre-dominantly non-White family members making decisions about potentially non-beneficial ICU treatments were conducted in the medical ICU of an academic public hospital in Los Angeles County.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransl Psychiatry
August 2025
Social Stress and Family Health Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Many refugees experience multiple traumatic events, which set them at increased risk to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). To refine interventions aimed at improving refugees' mental health, a better understanding of the factors modulating vulnerability to war-related trauma is needed. In the present study, we focused on stress resonance as a potential vulnerability factor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
August 2025
Body and Action Lab and Spinal Center and Spinal Rehabilitation Laboratory, IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, 00179 Rome, Italy.
While the correlation between bodily states and cognitive processing has been extensively investigated concerning pain elaboration, little is known about how chronic, subjectively experienced pain (self-pain) following traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) affects embodied cognition, such as empathy for pain. This study aimed to determine whether individuals with SCI differ from healthy controls in these cognitive responses, and if such differences can be quantified through varying reaction times to pain-related and non-pain-related stimuli involving others. We assessed reactions to others' pain through behavioral responses in a classification task involving 15 participants with SCI (13 men; age range 19-56 years) and 15 healthy controls (11 men; age range 25-48 years).
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