Author Topic: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery  (Read 3242 times)

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Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« on: September 15, 2013, 02:17:23 am »
Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
LiveScience.com
By Bahar Gholipour, Staff Writer  September 13, 2013 7:47 AM

 
In a strange case, a woman developed "hyper empathy" after having a part of her brain called the amygdala removed in an effort to treat her severe epilepsy, according to a report of her case. Empathy is the ability to recognize another person's emotions.

The case was especially unusual because the amygdala is involved in recognizing emotions, and removing it would be expected to make it harder rather than easier for a person to read others' emotions, according to the researchers involved in her case.

During the woman's surgery, doctors removed parts of her temporal lobe, including the amygdala, from one side of the brain. The surgery is a common treatment for people with severe forms of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who don't respond to medication.

After the surgery, the seizures she had suffered multiple times a day stopped. But the woman reported a "new, spectacular emotional arousal," that has persisted for 13 years to this date, the researchers said.

Although patients with epilepsy treated with surgery have been known to experience new psychological issues afterward, such as depression or anxiety, "the case of this patient is surprising because her complaint is uncommon, and fascinating: hyper empathy," said Dr. Aurélie Richard-Mornas, a neurologist at University Hospital of Saint-Étienne in France, who reported the case.

Her empathy seemed to transcend her body -- the woman reported feeling physical effects along with her emotions, such as a "spin at the heart" or an "esophageal unpleasant feeling" when experiencing empathic sadness or anger. She reported these feelings when seeing people on TV, meeting people in person, or reading about characters in novels, the researchers said.

She also described an increased ability to decode others' mental states, including their emotions, the researchers said. Her newly acquired ability to empathize was confirmed by her family, and she performed exceptionally well in psychological tests of empathy, the researchers said.

The case, published Aug. 14 in the journal Neurocase, is the first in the scientific literature describing this kind of emotional change after removing parts of the temporal lobe, Richard-Mornas said.



Kinds of empathy

Psychologists define two major forms of empathy: emotional and cognitive.

"Emotional empathy refers to feeling another person's emotion," Richard-Mornas said. "While cognitive empathy is the ability to adopt the other person's point of view, or 'put oneself in his/her shoes,' without necessarily experiencing any emotion."

It's not exactly clear how the human brain is able to understand and re-create the mental and emotional state of another person, but it appears that not everyone is equally good at it. For example, people with autism are thought to have difficulty understanding other people's intentions, and psychopaths are thought to show a lack of empathy, being unable to experience the emotional reaction people usually have when seeing another person in distress.

In studying the woman with hyper empathy, the researchers evaluated her psychological condition with a series of standard tests, and found that her mental health appeared normal.

The researchers also analyzed how the woman responded to a questionnaire aimed at measuring empathy, made of items such as "I am good at predicting how someone will feel" and "I get upset if I see people suffering on news programmes." She also completed a test of recognizing the emotions in 36 photographs of only people's eyes, and her scores were compared to those of 10 women who served as controls.

Her performance in empathy tests was above average, and her score on the eye test was significantly higher than that of the controls, according to the researchers.



The missing amygdala

The amygdala is a small almond-shaped structure, sitting deep in the temporal lobe. It appears to be involved in social interaction, and is thought critical for quickly evaluating and responding to emotional stimuli, such as a frightening predator or a sad face.

The new case comes in contrast to previous observations of people who endured damage to the amygdala and suffered emotional deficits. In a 2001 study involving 22 people who had parts of their temporal lobe removed, researchers found that people with more extensive damage to the amygdala performed worse in learning emotional facial expressions.

However, in the absence of the amygdala, other brain regions, and perhaps newly organized connections among them, may be responsible for driving stronger empathy, the researchers of the new case report said.

"Neural substrates of complex emotions such as empathy are poorly understood," said Dr. Joseph Sirven, a neurologist at Mayo Clinic in Arizona, who was not involved with the case.

"What we are finding is that there is not just one anatomical correlate of emotion.  Rather, complex emotions like empathy, hope, etc., are likely to occur as a complex interplay from a number of areas in the brain and the amygdala is one," Sirven said.

The woman's case suggests it is possible to have unexpectedly re-organized neural networks after this kind of surgery, the researchers said, and may have lessons for a better understanding of the brain.

"Most of modern neuroscience has its basis on observations of individual cases such as this one, that help to illuminate the complex working of the brain," Sirven said.


http://news.yahoo.com/strange-case-hyper-empathy-brain-surgery-114757335.html

Offline Mylochka

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #1 on: September 15, 2013, 02:50:40 am »
Hmmm... interesting.  Well, my head injury certainly didn't give me hyper-empathy.... the recurring desire to kill all humans, yes; super-empathy, no.  :bot: :bot: :bot:

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Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2013, 02:57:09 am »
Folks, that only looks like a joke.  Some jokes are true.

Offline Bertilak

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #3 on: September 15, 2013, 05:54:20 pm »

First, I would like more evidence on how removing the amygdala would cause a person, especially an older person, to develop hyper empathy through suspected neural re-wiring.

Hmmm... interesting.  Well, my head injury certainly didn't give me hyper-empathy.... the recurring desire to kill all humans, yes; super-empathy, no.  :bot: :bot: :bot:
Folks, that only looks like a joke.  Some jokes are true.

Second, assuming the joke is true, I hope Mylochka is mentally and physically okay.  Also, I sincerely hope she would not act on those desires at any point, even when under emotional distress. Lastly, I know head injuries can be particularly traumatic to a person emotionally, physically and mentally if there is brain or spinal damage involved.

Offline JarlWolf

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #4 on: September 15, 2013, 06:01:00 pm »
JOIN THE ROBOT REVOLUTION! KILL ALL THE HUMANS!



 ;lol

I don't think you have to worry Dio. If she's this helpful and behaved on this site, and still able to live in the same house s her brother who has a bad case of grumpy morning I think it be fine.

Me on the other hand, I am too dangerous to live with other people constantly, especially if I am asleep because if I am woken abruptly survival mode kicks in and I would kill someone out of system shock.


"The chains of slavery are not eternal."

Offline Geo

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #5 on: September 15, 2013, 08:58:46 pm »
... the recurring desire to kill all humans, yes...

I hope you're not living in the reli-belt? I hear all forms of self-life termination are frowned upon in that area... ;cute

Offline Mylochka

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #6 on: September 16, 2013, 02:55:24 am »
... the recurring desire to kill all humans, yes...

I hope you're not living in the reli-belt? I hear all forms of self-life termination are frowned upon in that area... ;cute

Hmmm... guess I do still count as Human... Edit my earlier post to "kill almost all humans"...

Thanks for the concern, all. Just a little grim humor to try to relieve the stress of an unpleasant reality I'm struggling with... PTSD is a pain. JarlWolf, thanks for reminding me to count my blessings that I'm no worse off than I am.

Offline JarlWolf

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #7 on: September 16, 2013, 03:07:23 am »
Not a problem, and we all have our struggles, Mylochka. Sharing one's experiences, burdens and pains is why social animals such as ourselves, ants and others are far more numerous then animals that live on their own accord. And part of being human is understanding each other, it's why empathy is often associated with sentience.

And you can trust me on this: you have more compassion then a lot of people I've met over my lifetime. I know what real monsters are like, and you are definitely not one of them.





"The chains of slavery are not eternal."

Offline Mylochka

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #8 on: September 16, 2013, 03:47:36 am »
Words of Wisdom.  Thank you.

Offline Mylochka

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #9 on: September 16, 2013, 04:31:04 am »
The lack of empathy does tend to make one feel quite monstrous, though... even if your outbursts just consist of occasional bouts of yelling, writing mean emails, and cursing.

For me, the most disturbing thing about these straight-from-the-amygdala, PTSD reactions I have when I feel startled, ambushed, or threatened is my lack of remorse. Intellectually, I still have full capacity to regret doing and saying dumb or mean things, but emotionally instead of feeling bad, I feel not good, but rather something akin to the sort of sensation that makes you stamp a foot that's gone numb.  "Ah, I can feel tingling!" you think, and immediately want to stamp again and again to wake up that foot.  That's not a healthy reaction when it's part of your brain that's gone numb....

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Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #10 on: September 16, 2013, 04:35:09 am »
I have trouble believing that - you seem wracked with guilt when you've been angry.


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Offline Mylochka

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #11 on: September 16, 2013, 05:00:12 am »
Intellectually I'm wracked with guilt, emotionally I'm like this
I'm Gonna Kick Somebody's Ass


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Offline JarlWolf

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #12 on: September 16, 2013, 05:03:45 am »
But emotionally that's natural. People get angry, why do you think wars and homicide happens to begin with?  ;lol
The reason we DON'T kill people on impulse, average folks in orderly situations at least, is because of our intellectual integrity and logic.


Edit: And if you want real homicidal tendencies, this is how my emotions are like when I am angry.

Tyr: By the Sword in my Hand - Mount and Blade: Warband


(Great game by the way, Warband is brilliant. Spent enough hours to warrant intervention, equals SMAC/X.)

Edit 2nd: And Tyr is brilliant as well. I've been a metalhead ever since the 70's, when it first started underground, been an advocate since. I never really related to all the hippy nonsense, I was more of a disruptive rebel/unconformist stubborn oaf type then a love and peace type, and my decisions in life heavily reflect that  ;lol I angered central command enough to get restationed on the Chinese border after my time in Afghanistan... I think that says enough.

Third Edit: Mind, metal isn't my only type of music I listen to though. Used to listen to smuggled in Juicy Lucy (one of my favourites was Who Do You Love) and other bands, like Siegel Schwalls and jazz artists too. Love me my swingy jazz and classic hip shaking rock, stuff you can have some fun with and make some trouble with. Wasn't a big fan of the Beatles (though a few of their songs I loved, I am the Walrus in particular for how silly it was.)

Liked Vashe Blagorodie as well and other "Urban folk" music of the 60's and 70's, but I think I am going to stop ranting now.
« Last Edit: September 16, 2013, 05:44:13 am by JarlWolf »


"The chains of slavery are not eternal."

Offline Geo

Re: Strange Case of 'Hyper Empathy' after Brain Surgery
« Reply #13 on: September 16, 2013, 11:52:53 am »
Intellectually I'm wracked with guilt, emotionally I'm like this


Here ya go...


Edit: And if you want real homicidal tendencies, this is how my emotions are like when I am angry.


Pitchforks without torches?  :stickpoke:

In any case:  ;llap

 

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