Compassion Meditation Enhances Empathic Accuracy and Related Neural Activity.

Author: Mascaro JS, Rilling JK, Negi LT, Raison C.
Affiliation:
Corresponding author: Charles L. Raison MD Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona College of Medicine, 1501 Campbell Ave, P.O. Box 245017 Tucson, Arizona 85724, USA 520-626-0633 craison@medadmin.arizona.edu.
Conference/Journal: Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci.
Date published: 2012 Sep 5
Other: Word Count: 200



The ability to accurately infer others' mental states from facial expressions is important for optimal social functioning and is fundamentally impaired in social cognitive disorders such as autism. While pharmacologic interventions have shown promise for enhancing empathic accuracy, little is known about the effects of behavioral interventions on empathic accuracy and related brain activity. This study employed a randomized, controlled and longitudinal design to investigate the effect of a secularized analytical compassion meditation program, Cognitively Based Compassion Training (CBCT), on empathic accuracy. Twenty-one healthy participants received functional MRI (fMRI) scans while completing an empathic accuracy task, the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET), both prior to and after completion of either CBCT or a health discussion control group. Upon completion of the study interventions, participants randomized to CBCT, were significantly more likely than control subjects to have increased scores on the RMET and increased neural activity in the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and dorsomedial PFC (dmPFC). Moreover, changes in dmPFC and IFG activity from baseline to the post-intervention assessment were associated with changes in empathic accuracy. These results suggest that CBCT may hold promise as a behavioral intervention for enhancing empathic accuracy and the neurobiology supporting it.
PMID: 22956676

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