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Trait compassion is associated with the neural substrate of empathy
Authors:Xin Hou  Timothy A Allen  Dongtao Wei  Hui Huang  Kangcheng Wang  Colin G DeYoung  Jiang Qiu
Institution:1.Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (SWU),Ministry of Education,Chongqing,China;2.Department of Psychology,Southwest University,Chongqing,China;3.Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute,Toronto,Canada;4.Department of Psychology,University of Minnesota,Minneapolis,USA
Abstract:Individual differences in the personality trait Agreeableness underlie humans’ ability to interpret social cues and coordinate effectively with others. However, previous investigations of the neural basis of Agreeableness have yielded largely inconsistent results. Recent evidence has demonstrated that Agreeableness can be divided into two, correlated subdimensions. Compassion reflects tendencies toward empathy, sympathy, and concern for others, while Politeness reflects tendencies toward compliance and refraining from aggression and exploitation. The present study seeks to clarify the neural substrates of Agreeableness by examining whether structural differences in the brain show distinct associations with Compassion and Politeness. Results of a meta-analysis of fMRI studies examining empathy were used to generate hypotheses about the brain regions and networks that underlie trait Compassion. Results of a large-scale structural neuroimaging investigation (N = 275) were largely consistent with the meta-analysis: Compassion was positively correlated with gray matter volume in the bilateral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and anterior insula (AI). Further, these differences appear to be associated with Compassion specifically, as opposed to Politeness, suggesting that these two traits have at least partially distinct neuroanatomical substrates.
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