Articles: empathy.
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Seeing actions, emotions and feelings of other individuals may activate resonant mechanisms that allow the empathic understanding of others' states. Being crucial for implementing pro-social behaviors, empathy is considered as inherently altruistic. Here we explored whether the personal experience of pain make individuals less inclined to share others' pain. ⋯ Conversely, the N2a-P2 component, supposedly associated to affective pain qualities, did not show any specific modulation during observation of others' pain. Thus, viewing 'flesh and bone' pain in others specifically modulates neural activity in the pain matrix sensory node. Moreover, this socially-derived inhibitory effect is correlated with the intensity of the pain attributed to self rather than to others suggesting that being in pain may bias the empathic relation with stranger models towards self-centred instead than other-related stances.
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There has been a call to include empathy as a selection criterion in medical training. Empathy is a complex construct currently assessed by self-rating and observational scales, which may be complicated by the subjectivity of such measurements. Neuroscientific research into disorders of empathy such as autism should be encouraged to help further refine the evolving construct of empathy. ⋯ Competence and empathy may be independent qualities developed by different aspects of medical training. Provision of better work conditions and environments for physicians may forestall erosion of empathy, reducing the need to predict and enhance its development. Empathy should be valued in medical students and doctors, but more research is needed into the nature, assessment, and correlates of empathy before its adoption as a selection criterion for medical students.