Fiche publication
Date publication
janvier 2023
Journal
Biological psychology
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr ROHMER Odile
Tous les auteurs :
Granjon M, Doignon-Camus N, Popa-Roch M, Rohmer O
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
While social neuroscience has already provided evidence for a deficit of affective empathy in racial prejudice, little is known about other less visible social categories when considered as an outgroup. We studied the process of empathy through event-related brain potentials (ERPs). We focused on the group "people with disabilities" as they are the target of a large amount of prejudice. Twenty-six participants performed a pain decision task. The mean amplitudes of N1, P2, N2-N3 and P3 components were recorded. Our results are consistent with previous work on prejudice, showing that the pain detection is modulated by group membership (with disabilities vs. without disabilities) on N2-N3, suggesting a better neural decoding of pain vs. non-pain in the without-disability condition. Critically, no effect of early sensory components (N1, P2) was found, and P3 was not moderated by disability. These findings indicate a different time course of empathic responses depending on the condition, suggesting that people with disabilities trigger specific empathic responses. Our results contribute to disentangling perceptual processes from affective empathy reactions.
Mots clés
Affective processes, Disability, Empathy, Event-related brain potentials (ERP), Prejudice, Social cognition
Référence
Biol Psychol. 2023 01 24;177:108507