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  • 8
    Nov
    2012
    4:56pm, EST

    Alcoholic men can't feel your pain. Here's why

    By Linda Carroll

    Too much alcohol can ruin a man’s appreciation of irony and block feelings of empathy. And that’s true even when he’s sober, a new study suggests. 

    Scientists suspect that chronic heavy drinking damages parts of the brain that are crucial to decoding others’ emotions and to processing humor, especially irony.

    “Chronic alcohol abuse seems to have effects on the perception and decoding of emotional expressions,” says Simona Amenta, a post-doctoral researcher at Italy’s University of Milano-Bicocca and a lecturer at the Catholic University of Milan. “It has been associated with … deficits in emotion recognition and verbalization, leading to difficulties in distinguishing and comprehending people’s emotional states.”

    Some studies, in fact, have shown that alcoholics tend to misidentify the emotions of people they are interacting with, Amenta notes. So sadness can be mistaken for anger, while happiness might come across as a negative emotion.

    To look at the impact of chronic heavy drinking on emotion recognition, Amenta and her European colleagues tested 22 men who were in their third week of an alcohol detoxification program. They compared them to 22 men who were not alcoholics, the team reported in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.

    All 44 study volunteers were asked to read a series of stories that concluded with either a straightforward sentence or an ironic one. They were then asked to complete a questionnaire designed to determine whether the men could understand the emotional states of the characters in each story and also detect when characters were speaking ironically.

    The men would need to be sensitive to others’ emotions to be able to determine whether a character’s concluding statement was straightforward or whether it was conveying the opposite meaning -- in other words, whether it was spoken with irony.

    One example of the type of story the men were asked to read was about a dinner party: “Sarah invited her coworkers over for a work dinner and asked everybody not to be late.”

    Some of the men received a version of the story with a straightforward ending: “Paul is the first to arrive. Sarah says: ‘You’re right on time!’”

    Others got the story with an ironic ending:  “Paul arrives when the dinner has already begun. Sarah says: ‘You’re right on time!’”

    As it turns out, the drinkers were much worse at detecting irony. In fact, they identified ironic sentences correctly only 63 percent of the time, as compared to 90 percent of the non-alcoholic volunteers.

    What this means is that problem drinkers can completely misinterpret what they’re seeing and hearing. 

    Lara Ray, an assistant professor of psychology and psychiatry at the University of California, Los Angeles, isn’t surprised to see differences in how alcoholic and non-alcoholic brains work. Chronic alcohol abuse changes the brain, she says.

    The kinds of misinterpretations alcoholics make might predispose them to getting into the fights that seem all too common in bars.

    That, plus the fact that alcohol is a disinhibitor. “So those who are higher in aggression become more aggressive,” Ray adds.

    124 comments

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  • 14
    Nov
    2011
    3:10pm, EST

    Empathy may be in your genes -- and on your face

    By Kimberly Hayes Taylor

    If you seem to have a sign written on your forehead that says you care more, maybe it’s in your genes, a new study suggests.

    We all have about three billion letters in our genetic code, but people who have a two copies of the "G" gene in their DNA seem to be more empathetic and are more trustworthy, compassionate and cooperative – and it can be detected in about 20 seconds, says Aleksandr Kogan, a social psychologist at the University of Toronto at Mississauga. People who don't have the double G variation are less likely to be empathetic.

    A variation in the oxytocin receptor gene can be identified by non-verbal behaviors in people who smile more, offer head nods and eye contact. The findings were published in today’s early online edition published in the journal, Proceedings of the National Academy Sciences in the United States of America (PNAS). Oxytocin is sometimes called the “love hormone” and is associated with bonding, sexual arousal and, of course, empathy. 

    “People who are more empathetic seem to be better at affirming you,” Kogan says. “They are more understanding and they smile. They are going to have more open body posture; their arms are going to be out more, signaling ‘I’m here for you.’ Some, you are going to judge as more empathetic.”

    Kogan and his team made this determination when they asked 116 University of Toronto students to watch a short, silent video clip of people with varying oxytocin receptors genes listening to their romantic partners tell them about a time of suffering. The ethnically diverse students -- average age 19 -- were asked to identify which people were more trustworthy, compassionate and cooperative.

    After only 20 seconds, the people who watched the video could easily point out which listening partners had the double G genotype and were more empathetic because of their caring body language compared to people who did have this particular empathy gene.

    If you like this, try these:

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    16 comments

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Linda Carroll

Linda Carroll is a regular contributor to NBC News. She is co-author of the new book "The Concussion Crisis: Anatomy of a Silent Epidemic.”

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