The study shows that a part of the brain called the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) seems particularly attuned to other people's good news, but how it responds varies substantially depending on our levels of empathy.
For people who rated themselves as highly empathetic, the ACC responded only when another person had good news coming, but for people who gave themselves lower empathy scores, the ACC also responded when bad news was predicted for themselves.
This new insight could prove important in understanding the role of the ACC in disorders of social behaviour and empathy, including psychopathy and autism.
Researchers scanned the brains of 30 male volunteers aged 19-32 using functional magnetic resonance imaging while they saw symbols that predicted how likely either they or another person was to win money.
Participants also completed a questionnaire that assessed their empathy level in the week before they had the scan.
"We looked at how this brain response varied in people with different levels of empathy. We wanted to see whether the brains of people who have high levels of empathy are particularly responsive to other people's good fortune," said lead author Patricia Lockwood, from the University College London (UCL) Psychology & Language Sciences.
However, there were substantial differences in how 'specialised' this ACC response was, which were linked to how empathetic participants said they were.
Participants whose ACC activation was the most specialised for other people showed an ACC response only when the other person was very likely to win money. These volunteers had rated themselves as high in empathy.
However, participants whose ACC activation was less specialised for other people also showed an ACC response when they themselves were very unlikely to win money. These participants had given themselves much lower empathy scores.
The study was published in the Journal of Neuroscience.
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