2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.06.007
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Behavioral and mechanistic insight into rodent empathy

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Cited by 84 publications
(73 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
(95 reference statements)
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“…Interpreting behaviour is contentious but by combining such information with data on the level of effective emotional regulation for each species and with features of the two other requirements (response and outcome) we could develop a more complete picture of the observed phenomena. Although we have not discussed evidence for neural mechanisms of empathy in non‐human animals herein (most of the available data comes from rodent studies, and there are several reviews available: Panksepp & Lahvis, ; Panksepp & Panksepp, ; Keum & Shin, ; Meyza et al ., ; Sivaselvachandran et al ., ), the study of the neural basis of empathy is very promising for assessing continuity between empathy in humans and other species. Finally, future studies assessing the motives underlying possible empathic behaviours (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Interpreting behaviour is contentious but by combining such information with data on the level of effective emotional regulation for each species and with features of the two other requirements (response and outcome) we could develop a more complete picture of the observed phenomena. Although we have not discussed evidence for neural mechanisms of empathy in non‐human animals herein (most of the available data comes from rodent studies, and there are several reviews available: Panksepp & Lahvis, ; Panksepp & Panksepp, ; Keum & Shin, ; Meyza et al ., ; Sivaselvachandran et al ., ), the study of the neural basis of empathy is very promising for assessing continuity between empathy in humans and other species. Finally, future studies assessing the motives underlying possible empathic behaviours (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Targeted helping requires sophisticated cognitive capacities that are not thought to be present in rodents. However, their behavioural ecology and new empirical evidence suggest that some rodents, particularly rats, could be interesting subjects to investigate the roots of helping behaviour (Panksepp & Lahvis, ; Panksepp & Panksepp, ; Kirk, McMillan & Roberts, ; Hernandez‐Lallement et al ., ; Sivaselvachandran et al ., ).…”
Section: Empathic Perspective‐takingmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…By contrast, vicarious freezing in observational fear conditioning is evoked by social transmission of the demonstrator animal's affective state and should therefore be dependent on social perception and the integrated social cognitive processes . And the process by which recognition of the demonstrator's distress triggers fear in the observer is, by definition, a form of affective empathy, a critical factor involved in social fear transmission and the ensuing observational learning . Observational fear learning studies in primates and humans, where subjects recognize fear by observing a conspecific suffering, showed that trait empathy was positively associated with stronger vicarious fear response …”
Section: Main Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like humans, mice and rats exhibit observational fear, social modulations of pain, consolation, and prosocial helping behavior . Observational fear is a rodent behavioral model for assessing empathic fear . In observational fear, a mouse is vicariously fear conditioned by observing a conspecific receive aversive foot shocks .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%