Skip to main content
The Scientific World Journal logoLink to The Scientific World Journal
. 2006 Sep 20;6:1146–1163. doi: 10.1100/tsw.2006.221

Human Empathy Through the Lens of Social Neuroscience

Jean Decety 1,*, Claus Lamm 1
PMCID: PMC5917291  PMID: 16998603

Abstract

Empathy is the ability to experience and understand what others feel without confusion between oneself and others. Knowing what someone else is feeling plays a fundamental role in interpersonal interactions. In this paper, we articulate evidence from social psychology and cognitive neuroscience, and argue that empathy involves both emotion sharing (bottom-up information processing) and executive control to regulate and modulate this experience (top-down information processing), underpinned by specific and interacting neural systems. Furthermore, awareness of a distinction between the experiences of the self and others constitutes a crucial aspect of empathy. We discuss data from recent behavioral and functional neuroimaging studies with an emphasis on the perception of pain in others, and highlight the role of different neural mechanisms that underpin the experience of empathy, including emotion sharing, perspective taking, and emotion regulation.

Keywords: empathy, intersubjectivity, affective sharing, perspective taking, emotion regulation, social neuroscience


Articles from The Scientific World Journal are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES