Saturday, December 05, 2009

Impaired Cognitive Empathy in Bipolar Disorder and in Patients with Ventromedial Prefrontal Lesions

Cognitive empathy, or the ability to take another person's perspective, is closely related to (or even synonymous with) theory of mind,
...the ability to attribute mental states—beliefs, intents, desires, pretending, knowledge, etc.—to oneself and others and to understand that others have beliefs, desires and intentions that are different from one's own.
On the other hand, emotional or affective empathy is "emotional contagion" - the ability to mirror an emotional response observed in another person and to experience it vicariously. Dr. Simone Shamay-Tsoory and colleagues (2009a) have developed a model that distinguishes between the two types of empathy, which are represented by separate neuroanatomical systems (see figure below).


Fig. 6 (Shamay-Tsoory et al., 2009a). Two separate systems for emotional and cognitive based empathy. Behaviourally, emotional empathy involves personal distress, empathic concern and emotion recognition. Anatomically the IFG [inferior frontal gyrus] appears to be responsible for emotional empathy. ... Cognitive empathy, on the other hand, involves perspective taking, the fantasy scale and theory of mind and is mediated by the VM [ventromedial prefrontal cortex].

Individuals with bipolar disorder can show deficits in social cognition and emotion regulation even in the euthymic (remitted) state (Green et al., 2007). These observation led Shamay-Tsoory et al. (2009b) to examine cognitive and emotional empathy in 19 euthymic patients with bipolar disorder and 20 matched control participants:
The cognitive and affective aspects of empathic abilities were assessed using the Interpersonal Reactive Index. The Interpersonal Reactive Index includes four seven-item subscales, each tapping a different aspect of empathy: (a) the perspective taking subscale, which measures the reported tendency to adopt spontaneously the psychological point of view of others; (b) the fantasy subscale, measuring the tendency to imaginatively transpose oneself into fictional situations; (c) the empathic concern scale, measuring the tendency to experience feelings of sympathy and compassion for others; and (d) the personal distress scale assesses the tendency to experience distress and discomfort in response to others’ observed distress.
The perspective-taking subscale was used as a measure of cognitive empathy, and the personal distress scale was used as a measure of emotional empathy. To assess theory of mind, the ability to detect faux pas was examined using a set of stories developed by Baron-Cohen et al. (1999). For example:
James bought Richard a toy airplane for his birthday. A few months later, they were playing with it, and James accidentally dropped it. "Don't worry" said Richard, "I never liked it anyway. Someone gave it to me for my birthday."
Questions after each faux pas and control passage assessed story comprehension, false belief (i.e., the speaker had a mistaken belief and not malicious intent), faux pas detection, and specific identification of the faux pas. Also tested were recognition of emotional expressions from the eyes, cognitive flexibility, and spatial planning abilities.

The results indicated that the participants with bipolar disorder had lower scores than controls for cognitive empathy, but higher scores for emotional empathy.


Figure 1 (Shamay-Tsoory et al. (2009b). Participant Empathy Scores.

A similar effect was observed in the faux pas task, with the patients impaired on cognitive understanding, but not in affective understanding or in recognition of the faux pas. This agrees with prior studies on theory of mind in bipolar disorder (Malhi et al., 2008; Montag et al., 2009). On the other hand, the bipolar individuals showed completely intact performance on recognizing emotion in the eyes and in the spatial planning task. However, they had difficulty in set shifting and reversal learning in the cognitive flexibility task. And greater difficulty with reversal learning was associated with lower cognitive empathy scores, suggesting that cognitive inflexibility contributes to the deficiency in taking another's perspective.

What does this mean?
The present study results suggest that [the likelihood to engage in the process of reflecting on the viewpoint of others] is impaired in bipolar disorder. On the second affective scale, personal distress, the bipolar disorder group actually scored significantly higher than healthy comparison subjects... This indicates a greater tendency to have self-oriented feelings of anxiety and discomfort in response to tense interpersonal settings.

....

...[Their] exaggerated emotional response to others may be expressed in a dysfunctional empathic emotional overreaction (or “hyper empathy”).

This notion is consistent with the “simulation” theory, according to which individuals impersonate others’ emotional mental states, using their own mental state. Thus, it may be hypothesized that bipolar disorder patients tend to engage in the “oversimulation” of others’ emotions, as reflected in high affective empathy, and as a result, they tend to misinterpret others’ mental states, which is reflected in impaired cognitive empathy and theory of mind.
What are the brain systems that mediate such difficulties in those with bipolar disorder? Returning to the model in Figure 6 (above), Shamay-Tsoory et al. (2009a) associated emotional empathy with the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and cognitive empathy with ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VM). How did they determine such a clear dissociation? This was from another experiment that administered the same set of tests to a different population: neurological patients with fairly discrete lesions in each of those brain areas.


Fig. 2 (Shamay-Tsoory et al., 2009a). Group and task (cognitive versus emotional empathy) interactions. Significant interaction between group and empathy type. Patients with VM lesions were impaired in cognitive empathy compared to the healthy controls (HC), patients with posterior lesions (PC) and patients with IFG lesions whereas patients with IFG lesions were impaired in emotional empathy compared to the HC, VM and the PC group.

As with most things, though, the anatomical dissociation wasn't completely clean; there was some degree of overlap, as shown below.

Fig. 5 (Shamay-Tsoory et al., 2009a). Location and overlap of brain lesions according to emotional versus cognitive empathy impairment-groups. (A) Lesions of the emotional-empathy-impaired group (n=6). Four patients had an IFG damage involving [Brodmann] area 44, one had a VM damage and one had a PC damage. Chi-square analysis revealed that lesions involving area 44 were significantly more frequent in this group as compared to the non-impaired group. (B) Lesions of the cognitive-empathy-impaired group (n=7): five had VM damage involving area 10 and 11, one had an IFG damage and one had a PC damage. Chi-square analysis revealed that lesions involving area 10 and area 11 were significantly more frequent in this group as compared to the non-impaired group.

Nonetheless, such human lesion studies can demonstrate the importance of specific brain areas for the cognitive or emotional processes in question, thereby illuminating the underlying neural network abnormalities in psychiatric disorders.

References

Baron-Cohen S, O'Riordan M, Stone V, Jones R, Plaisted K. (1999). Recognition of faux pas by normally developing children and children with Asperger syndrome or high-functioning autism. J Autism Dev Disord. 29:407-18.

Green MJ, Cahill CM, Malhi GS. (2007). The cognitive and neurophysiological basis of emotion dysregulation in bipolar disorder. J Affect Disord. 103(1-3):29-42.

Malhi GS, Lagopoulos J, Das P, Moss K, Berk M, Coulston CM. (2008). A functional MRI study of Theory of Mind in euthymic bipolar disorder patients. Bipolar Disord. 10:943-56.

Montag C, Ehrlich A, Neuhaus K, Dziobek I, Heekeren HR, Heinz A, Gallinat J. (2009). Theory of mind impairments in euthymic bipolar patients. J Affect Disord. Sep 12. [Epub ahead of print].

ResearchBlogging.org

Shamay-Tsoory, S., Aharon-Peretz, J., & Perry, D. (2009a). Two systems for empathy: a double dissociation between emotional and cognitive empathy in inferior frontal gyrus versus ventromedial prefrontal lesions. Brain, 132 (3), 617-627 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awn279

Shamay-Tsoory, S., Harari, H., Szepsenwol, O., & Levkovitz, Y. (2009b). Neuropsychological Evidence of Impaired Cognitive Empathy in Euthymic Bipolar Disorder. Journal of Neuropsychiatry, 21 (1), 59-67 DOI: 10.1176/appi.neuropsych.21.1.59


Figure 2 (de Waal, 2008). The Russian doll model of empathy and imitation. Empathy (right) induces a similar emotional state in the subject and the object, with at its core the perception-action mechanism (PAM). The doll's outer layers, such as sympathetic concern and perspective-taking, build upon this hard-wired socio-affective basis. Sharing the same mechanism, the doll's imitation side (left) correlates with the empathy side. Here, the PAM underlies motor mimicry, coordination, shared goals, and true imitation. Even though the doll's outer layers depend on prefrontal functioning and an increasing self-other distinction, these outer layers remain connected to its inner core.

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8 Comments:

At December 10, 2009 10:48 PM, Anonymous Becky said...

I recently read a great book titled, "Blessed with Bipolar: 36 God-Given Gifts of Manic-Depression," by Richard Jarzynka which compliments this post. He too points out how people with bipolar disorder feel emotions more intensely than most people and therefore can empathize better with people than most people. Very interesting stuff!

 
At December 11, 2009 3:10 AM, Blogger The Neurocritic said...

Thanks for reading. But Shamay-Tsoory et al. suggest that the result of having "hyper emotional empathy" is that they misinterpret other people's states:

...[Their] exaggerated emotional response to others may be expressed in a dysfunctional empathic emotional overreaction (or “hyper empathy”).

...

Thus, it may be hypothesized that bipolar disorder patients tend to engage in the “oversimulation” of others’ emotions, as reflected in high affective empathy, and as a result, they tend to misinterpret others’ mental states, which is reflected in impaired cognitive empathy and theory of mind.

It leads to misunderstandings. And "knowing Christ" will not heal bipolar disorder, so I disagree strongly with Richard Jarzynka.

 
At January 16, 2010 11:32 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bipolar Disorder is a spectrum disorder. There are, for instance, significant differences between Bipolar Type I and Type II disorders. Are there differences in cognitive empathy between types? If the study subject is depressed, in remission, hypomanic, or manic does s/he demonstrate more or less cognitive empathy? What effects, if any, do medications have? It would be nice to see this study replicated with much larger numbers of test subjects. Has this been studied in unipolar depression?

 
At January 17, 2010 10:08 AM, Blogger The Neurocritic said...

In this study, there were 19 bipolar I patients. Medications were lithium (n=14), carbamazepine (n=2), sodium valproate (n=2), combination of lithium and sodium valproate (n=1). All were tested in the remitted phase.

I haven't seen any papers comparing bipolar I vs. II, or comparing cognitive empathy during different mood states.

 
At February 28, 2010 9:25 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

For many years my wife appeared "off" emotionally. Being married young, it was my foolish belief that someday it would be "outgrown". Eventually it became obvious that it was mental illness. She still has not properly addressed her condition, and we are unfortunatley divorced because of her lack of insight impaired cognitive abilities.

This study is one of the most enlightening pieces I have read! It has hlped me gain insight into what was happening "emotionally" with her. Mental illness(even of the same diagnosis) is very particular to the individual, but this is what I observed for years, and suspected was happening, although I did not know she was ill at the time and had no knowledge of the effects BPD can have on interpersonal relationships. Her "interjection" of what my emotional state was generally always distorted as incorrectly percieved my emotions - constantly misjudging them.

Unfortunately for us it is to late, if you can help just one person... you know the rest.

 
At July 05, 2012 8:48 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yes, this article is illuminating. My husband is bipolar and the hyper emotional empathy and low cognitive empathy puts in words what I have been noticing for years. It is in some ways more difficult to live with the more overt bipolar symptoms.

 
At August 29, 2015 12:18 PM, Blogger Reuben said...

This is a very complicated way of saying a very simple thing. A bipolar person is able to distinguish between having empathy for an individual as a person, and whether or not s/he agrees with the person's specific outlook, goals, motivations, and why they are distressed in relation to those. Be a bipolar person and go to a doctor and you will pretty quickly realize that all of these findings are reversed when it is the "healthy" (or more accurately, non-bipolar - nice ethnocentrism) person who is adjudging the empathetic abilities of the empathizer - a deficit in affective empathy is why bipolar people very often feel that their real concerns are being dismissed, or that others do not try to understand them.

Note that in the studies, no bipolar people were actually asked what they thought, although the researchers quite happily used them as test subjects. The findings and the location of the empathy "deficit" would be reversed if this was the case.

Even more simply, bipolar people tend to operate more from the (so-called) right-brain, intuitive areas of the mind, unlike the majority which operates more from the logical areas of the mind. So once again this study is little more than an exercise in ethnocentrism and attempting to smear people with mental illnesses as dangerous, lacking, or different. (Note that a lack of empathy is associated very strongly in pop psychology with psychopathy or sociopathy, so this assertion draws a very, very dangerous and incorrect parallel between the two. Most sociopaths are otherwise 'healthy' mentally and are often very high-functioning, persuasive, successful, charming and/or attractive, something that most bipolar people with their lack of self-confidence, and tendency towards general dysfunctionality in 'normal' society are absolutely not.)

Again, if you want to find out about bipolar, or other mental conditions, why not start by asking someone who has them? Is that really any more difficult than trying to map the complex inner workings of the human mind, without a clue as to what is going on in these people's lives, and coming up with predictably distorted conclusions?

 
At March 20, 2016 7:46 AM, Blogger GA said...

I have been watching a woman for 9 years that was diagnosed as bipolar as a teenager. We disagree on almost everything. She has 3 children and doesn't seem to have any real awareness of how she should be taking care of them. She has ignored them, locked herself in the bathroom and left them as infants and toddlers to take care of themselves, starved them to the point that the youngest at 1 1/2 years was very thin and her hair was so dry and brittle it would break off and took forever for it to grow. She lived in a low income trailer court and she allowed all 3 children to wander the trailer court and go into others homes that she barely knew. It's as though she has no concern for their well being, safety or health. Social Services have been called numerous times yet they refuse to do anything about these problems.
She has recently moved in with her mother because the only kind of work she will do is waitress and doesn't make enough money to support herself. Her mother has cancer and is taking chemo yet the woman is leaving her children with her mother to take care of them the majority of the time.
She lies about everything and makes up stories that I think she believes are actually true.
She wants everything her way and blows a gasket and gets very hateful when it doesn't go her way.
She has no friends because she uses people for everything she can get out of them and when they get tired of it she makes up nasty stories about them.
This is very hard to deal with and I believe the children are going to suffer long term for her sickness.
How do you deal with this? She went through a 6 month rehab to get off drugs and I think she is back on them. She can't cope with life, won't give up the children but expects everyone else to take care of them. They should be taken away from her and she should be locked up away from society where she can do no more harm to anyone.

 

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