Synaesthetics, empathy and mirror neurons
Mar. 16th, 2010 01:35 pm...There is a general consensus that empathy-linked conditions arise from abnormalities in the common mechanisms for empathy found in all humans: although few of us experience sensations as powerful as Barrett's, we all wince at a brutal foul on the football field and feel compassion for someone experiencing grief. Many studies have suggested that our capacity for empathy arises from a specific group of neurons, labelled mirror neurons. First discovered in macaque monkeys, they are situated in and around the premotor cortex and parietal lobe - regions that span the top of the brain near the middle of the head. These neurons fire both when you perform an action and when you see someone else perform that action.
Read more at NewScientist. If you experience pain synaesthesia, Bernadette Fitzgibbon would like to hear from you. You can contact her here.
Read more at NewScientist. If you experience pain synaesthesia, Bernadette Fitzgibbon would like to hear from you. You can contact her here.