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A boy cries as he recuperates after surgery during "Operation Smile" at a hospital in Manila's Makati financial district October 26, 2009. Operation Smile aim to provide free surgery for about a hundred children inflicted with cleft lips, cleft palates, and other facial deformities over a period of five days in Makati.  REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo

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    Study may explain roots of empathy

    CHICAGO
    Sun Jun 17, 2007 1:52pm EDT

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - When people say "I feel your pain," they do not mean it literally, but certain people really do feel something that appears to be an extreme form of empathy, British researchers said on Sunday.

    Health  |  Lifestyle

    They said watching someone being touched triggers the same part of the brain as actual touch, and this connection helps explain how we understand what other people are feeling.

    People who experience a tactile sense of touch when they see another person being touched -- something called mirror-touch synesthesia -- was first studied in 2005 in one person.

    But researchers at University College London have now studied 10 people with the same condition.

    "It suggests there is a link between certain aspects of the tactile system and empathy," said Michael Banissy of the university's department of psychology, whose work appears in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

    Banissy and colleagues first did a series of experiments to authenticate peoples' claims that they felt something when they saw someone else being touched.

    They asked the 10 people with mirror-touch synesthesia to identify when they were being touched on their own body while watching someone else being touched on the cheek.

    The actual touch was sometimes in the same spot as the person they watched being touched, and sometimes it was on the other side.

    "The idea was to see whether synesthetic and actual touch were confusable in any way," Banissy said in a telephone interview.

    He said people with this mirror-touch capability were faster when the touch they saw was in the same location as actual touch.

    "When actual touch and synesthetic touch were in different locations, sometimes they would confuse the two and report they were touched on both cheeks," he said.

    This confusion did not occur in 20 people without synesthesia who performed the same experiments.

    The mirror-touch people also scored higher than others on a questionnaire that measured empathy.

    "We often flinch when we see someone knock their arm, and this may be a weaker version of what these synesthetes experience," Dr. Jamie Ward, who led the research team, said in a statement.

    Other studies have suggested a link between empathy and mirror systems, but Ward said this was the first to suggest empathy involves more than one mechanism: an emotional gut reaction -- which appears exaggerated in the mirror-touch synesthetes -- and a cognitive process that involves thinking about how someone else feels.

    "This appears to be the emotional component of empathy," Banissy said. "It was purely gut instinct."

    One of the mirror-touch subjects in the study said the experience is all she has ever known.

    "It is -- to me at least -- a perfectly normal response to seeing touch or pain inflicted on another person," she said in a statement.

    The researchers are studying this empathy connection further and trying to determine how prevalent mirror-touch synesthesia is.

    "It does appear to be more common than we first thought," Banissy said.



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