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Empathy has been linked to enhanced processing of social information, yet the neurophysiological correlates of such individual differences remain underexplored. : The aim of this study was to investigate how individual differences in trait empathy are reflected in oscillatory brain activity during the perception of non-verbal social cues. : In this EEG study involving 30 participants, we examined spectral and time-frequency dynamics associated with trait empathy during a visual task requiring the interpretation of others' body gestures. : FFT Power spectral analyses (applied to alpha/mu, beta, high beta, and gamma bands) revealed that individuals with high empathy quotients (High-EQ) exhibited a tendency for increased beta-band activity over frontal regions and markedly decreased alpha-band activity over occipito-parietal areas compared to their low-empathy counterparts (Low-EQ), suggesting heightened attentional engagement and reduced cortical inhibition during social information processing. Similarly, time-frequency analysis using Morlet wavelets showed higher alpha power in Low-EQ than High-EQ people over occipital sites, with no group differences in mu suppression or desynchronization (ERD) over central sites, challenging prior claims linking mu ERD to mirror neuron activity in empathic processing. These findings align with recent literature associating frontal beta oscillations with top-down attentional control and emotional regulation, and posterior alpha with vigilance and sensory disengagement. : Our results indicate that empathic traits are differentially reflected in anterior and posterior oscillatory dynamics, supporting the notion that individuals high in empathy deploy greater cognitive and attentional resources when decoding non-verbal social cues. These neural patterns may underlie their superior ability to interpret body language and mental states from visual input.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci15070673 | 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.
Transl 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 PDFBr J Dev Psychol
August 2025
University of Bradford, Bradford, UK.
Extensive research has examined empathy in autistic people; this has largely been conducted by asking autistic participants to complete measures and engage in experimental procedures or by consulting with close relatives. To the best of our knowledge, this study is one of the first to seek the views of autistic participants on their self-perceived empathic capacity. In this case, empathy was explored within a wider context of self-concept.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2025
Leibniz Institute for Resilience Research (gGmbH), Wallstraße 7, 55122, Mainz, Germany.
An increasing body of research suggests that empathic traits at high levels may predict negative affectivity. Here, we investigate the combinatory and differential role of affective (personal distress, empathic concern) and cognitive (perspective taking) facets of empathy for their contribution to negative affectivity in two general population samples (N = 259, N = 938). A latent profile analysis revealed four combinatory groups of affective and cognitive empathic facets (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Sci
June 2025
"Rita Levi Montalcini" Department of Neurosciences, University of Turin, Via Cherasco, 15, 10126 Turin, TO, Italy.
Background/objectives: Sensory attenuation refers to the reduced perceptual intensity of self-generated stimuli and is considered a key marker of the sense of agency. While this phenomenon has been widely documented in individual contexts, less is known about how it operates during cooperative actions. In this study, we adopted a psychophysical approach to investigate sensory attenuation for auditory stimuli in both individual and interactive action contexts and examined the role of empathic traits in shaping the experience of agency.
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