Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
944824 | Neuropsychologia | 2013 | 6 Pages |
Whether empathy depends on activation of the mirror neuron system is controversial. This study tested the relationship between cognitive empathy and motor activation during action observation through the sensorimotor system. EEG activity was recorded over the motor area while participants observed and then performed a task demonstrated by a model. Analyses revealed significant suppression in mu/alpha (8–12 Hz) and beta (18–22 Hz) EEG bands, indicative of sensorimotor activity, during both observed and executed actions. Crucially, participants rating higher in perspective taking as a measure of trait cognitive empathy showed significantly less beta suppression when observing actions. The direction of this relationship, contrary to studies involving induced emotional empathy, may reflect individual differences in mentalizing and mirroring mechanisms to understand others' actions. Implications of these findings for the hypothesised empathy-mirror neuron system link are discussed.
► Mirroring of observed actions depends on trait levels of cognitive empathy. ► Those high in cognitive empathy show less motor cortex activity to observed actions. ► Individual differences in mentalizing and mirroring may underlie action perception.