Publication: Intracranial human recordings reveal association between neural activity and perceived intensity for the pain of others in the insula
Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Bruls, Rune
Ioumpa, Kalliopi
Mueller-Pinzler, Laura
Gallo, Selene
Qin, Chaoyi
van Straaten, Elisabeth C. W.
Self, Matthew W.
Peters, Judith C.
Possel, Jessy K.
Onuki, Yoshiyuki
Advisor
Publication Date
2022
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Based on neuroimaging data, the insula is considered important for people to empathize with the pain of others. Here, we present intracranial electroencephalographic (iEEG) recordings and single-cell recordings from the human insula while seven epilepsy patients rated the intensity of a woman's painful experiences seen in short movie clips. Pain had to be deduced from seeing facial expressions or a hand being slapped by a belt. We found activity in the broadband 20-190 Hz range correlated with the trial-by-trial perceived intensity in the insula for both types of stimuli. Within the insula, some locations had activity correlating with perceived intensity for our facial expressions but not for our hand stimuli, others only for our hand but not our face stimuli, and others for both. The timing of responses to the sight of the hand being hit is best explained by kinematic information; that for our facial expressions, by shape information. Comparing the broadband activity in the iEEG signal with spiking activity from a small number of neurons and an fMRI experiment with similar stimuli revealed a consistent spatial organization, with stronger associations with intensity more anteriorly, while viewing the hand being slapped.
Description
Source:
Elife
Publisher:
eLife Sciences Publications
Keywords:
Subject
Biology