Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 105, 15 January 2015, Pages 347-356
NeuroImage

Empathic concern drives costly altruism

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.10.043Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Trait empathic concern predicts altruistic action.

  • State distress, but not trait distress, predicts altruistic action.

  • A network comprised of VTA, caudate and sgACC support other-oriented prosocial decisions.

  • Neural evidence supporting caregiving model: social reward and attachment guides altruism.

Abstract

Why do we self-sacrifice to help others in distress? Two competing theories have emerged, one suggesting that prosocial behavior is primarily motivated by feelings of empathic other-oriented concern, the other that we help mainly because we are egoistically focused on reducing our own discomfort. Here we explore the relationship between costly altruism and these two sub-processes of empathy, specifically drawing on the caregiving model to test the theory that trait empathic concern (e.g. general tendency to have sympathy for another) and trait personal distress (e.g. predisposition to experiencing aversive arousal states) may differentially drive altruistic behavior. We find that trait empathic concern – and not trait personal distress – motivates costly altruism, and this relationship is supported by activity in the ventral tegmental area, caudate and subgenual anterior cingulate, key regions for promoting social attachment and caregiving. Together, this data helps identify the behavioral and neural mechanisms motivating costly altruism, while demonstrating that individual differences in empathic concern-related brain responses can predict real prosocial choice.

Keywords

Moral
Caudate
Subgenual ACC
VTA
Empathy
Altruism
Distress

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