ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

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情绪感染与生理自我表征的共享神经机制

王丹, 陈文锋, 王慧, 付雨佳, 刘俊业, 刘正奎   

  1. 天津行政学院公共管理教研部(心理调适中心), 天津 300191 中国
    中国人民大学心理学系, 北京 100872 中国
    中国科学院心理研究所健康与遗传心理学研究室, 北京 100101 中国
    澳门城市大学大健康学院, 澳门特别行政区 999078 中国
  • 收稿日期:2025-09-28 修回日期:2026-02-02 接受日期:2026-03-27
  • 基金资助:
    青年马克思主义者培育项目“人际互动背景下的情绪感染:基于动态自我表征视角”(25QMWT04)

The Shared Neural Mechanisms of Emotional Contagion and Physical Self-Representation

WANG Dan, CHEN Wenfeng, WANG Hui, FU Yujia, LIU Junye, LIU Zhengkui   

  1. , Tianjin Administration Institute 300191, China
    , Renmin University of China 100872, China
    CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, 100101, China
    , City University of Maca 999078, China
  • Received:2025-09-28 Revised:2026-02-02 Accepted:2026-03-27

摘要: 情绪感染和自我表征是社会认知中两类核心的心理过程,已有研究探讨了社会性自我表征与情绪感染的关系,而关于更基础的生理自我表征在情绪互动中的作用仍缺乏系统研究。本研究采用激活似然估计法(ALE)对25项情绪感染研究和30项以面孔识别为主的自我表征研究的脑功能成像(fMRI)研究进行元分析,系统研究情绪感染与生理自我表征在神经机制上的关联。结果显示,两类任务展现出显著的右半球优势,重叠脑区主要位于右侧额下回、右侧顶下小叶、右侧中央前回、右侧梭状回以及双侧脑岛。进一步结合元分析连通性模型(MACM)发现,这些区域共同构成一个涵盖额-岛-顶的协同激活网络,该网络整合了动作模拟、内感受觉察与自我相关信息加工。该机制的核心在于:显著性网络(脑岛/前扣带皮层)对内感受体验进行意义编码和对外部刺激进行显著性识别,并与额顶网络的动作模拟协同作用。本研究拓展了基于镜像神经元系统的无意识模仿的单一解释,支持了情绪感染是一个基于具身化的意义建构过程。该发现为理解人际情绪互动的神经基础提供了新视角,同时对社会认知障碍等临床问题的干预具有潜在启示意义。

关键词: 情绪感染, 生理自我表征, 镜像神经元系统, ALE元分析, 脑岛

Abstract: A fundamental question in social neuroscience concerns the mechanisms by which individuals understand and respond to the emotional states of others. Theories of embodied simulation and shared representation posit that understanding others is intrinsically linked to self-processing, suggesting that emotional processing and self-referential processing are not isolated, but rather interdependent mechanisms integrated within the social brain. Emotional Contagion (EC)—the tendency to "catch" or resonate with others' emotions—is a key manifestation of this process. However, the direct neural evidence linking EC to a basic form of self-processing, specifically Physical Self-Representation (PSR) via self-face processing, remains largely unexplored. Identifying this shared neural mechanism is essential for clarifying the fundamental embodied reference frame used in social interaction. This meta-analysis aimed to systematically and quantitatively investigate the shared neural substrates between emotional contagion and physical self-representation (operationalized as self-face recognition tasks). Furthermore, by employing Meta-Analytic Connectivity Modeling (MACM), we sought to move beyond simple anatomical overlap to explore the functional network organization and connectivity patterns of these shared regions, thereby providing more function-specific and network-level evidence for the shared representation theory. Based on 56 eligible fMRI studies, the ALE analysis revealed robust convergence in the right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), bilateral insula, and fusiform gyrus (FG) across both emotional contagion tasks and self-face recognition tasks. These regions constitute core nodes of the fronto-parietal action observation network and the salience network, supporting embodied simulation, interoceptive integration, and self-referential processing. MACM analyses further demonstrated consistent co-activation patterns across IFG- and insula-based networks, converging on the middle frontal gyrus, precentral gyrus, superior and inferior parietal lobule, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, and occipitotemporal cortices. These results indicate that the shared mechanisms are embedded not only in focal regions but also in broader functional networks underlying action-perception coupling, attention regulation, and self - other integration. Synthesizing these findings, we propose that emotional contagion and physical self-representation are linked through a multilayered embodied mechanism. At the perceptual stage, FG sensitivity to self-related or socially meaningful faces suggests that self-relevance modulates early social perception. At the sensorimotor stage, overlapping IFG and IPL activation supports automatic motor simulation involved in both emotion mimicry and self-recognition. At the interoceptive and salience-processing level, the insula and dorsal ACC integrate external emotional cues with internal bodily states, forming a basis for mapping others’ emotions onto one’s own experiential framework. This integrative architecture also explains individual differences in emotional contagion: individuals are more susceptible to synchronizing and sharing that emotion with close relationship partners than they are with strangers. This divergence in response is driven by underlying variations in the targets’self-relevance, social significance, and the congruence of internal physiological states Taken together, this study provides the first meta-analytic evidence for a shared embodied neural architecture linking emotional contagion and physical self-representation. The findings advance current understanding of dynamic self - other mapping and offer a unified neural framework for interpersonal emotional processing.

Key words: Emotional Contagion, Physical Self-representation, Mirror Neuron System, ALE meta-analysis, Insula