Scientists
Say Everyone Can Read Minds
By
Ker Than
Empathy
allows us to feel the emotions of others, to identify and understand their feelings
and motives and see things from their perspective. How we generate empathy remains
a subject of intense debate in cognitive science.
Some
scientists now believe they may have finally discovered its root. We're all essentially
mind readers, they say.
The
idea has been slow to gain acceptance, but evidence is mounting.
Mirror
neurons
In
1996, three neuroscientists were probing the brain of a macaque monkey when they
stumbled across a curious cluster of cells in the premotor cortex, an area of
the brain responsible for planning movements. The cluster of cells fired not only
when the monkey performed an action, but likewise when the monkey saw the same
action performed by someone else. The cells responded the same way whether the
monkey reached out to grasp a peanut, or merely watched in envy as another monkey
or a human did.
Because
the cells reflected the actions that the monkey observed in others, the neuroscientists
named them "mirror neurons."
Later
experiments confirmed the existence of mirror neurons in humans and revealed another
surprise. In addition to mirroring actions, the cells reflected sensations and
emotions.
"Mirror
neurons suggest that we pretend to be in another person's mental shoes,"
says Marco Iacoboni, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Los Angeles
School of Medicine. "In fact, with mirror neurons we do not have to pretend,
we practically are in another person's mind."
Since
their discovery, mirror neurons have been implicated in a broad range of phenomena,
including certain mental disorders. Mirror neurons may help cognitive scientists
explain how children develop a theory of mind (ToM), which is a child's understanding
that others have minds similar to their own. Doing so may help shed light on autism,
in which this type of understanding is often missing.
Theory
theory
Over
the years, cognitive scientists have come up with a number of theories to explain
how ToM develops. The "theory theory" and "simulation theory"
are currently two of the most popular.
Theory
theory describes children as budding social scientists. The idea is that children
collect evidence -- in the form of gestures and expressions -- and use their everyday
understanding of people to develop theories that explain and predict the mental
state of people they come in contact with.
Vittorio
Gallese, a neuroscientist at the University of Parma in Italy and one of original
discovers of mirror neurons, has another name for this theory: he calls it the
"Vulcan Approach," in honor of the Star Trek protagonist Spock, who
belonged to an alien race called the Vulcans who suppressed their emotions in
favor of logic. Spock was often unable to understand the emotions that underlie
human behavior.
Gallese
himself prefers simulation theory over this Vulcan approach.
Natural
mind readers
Simulation
theory states that we are natural mind readers. We place ourselves in another
person's "mental shoes," and use our own mind as a model for theirs.
Gallese
contends that when we interact with someone, we do more than just observe the
other person's behavior. He believes we create internal representations of their
actions, sensations and emotions within ourselves, as if we are the ones that
are moving, sensing and feeling.
Many
scientists believe that mirror neurons embody the predictions of simulation theory.
"We share with others not only the way they normally act or subjectively
experience emotions and sensations, but also the neural circuits enabling those
same actions, emotions and sensations: the mirror neuron systems," Gallese
told LiveScience.
Gallese
points out, however, that the two theories are not mutually exclusive. If the
mirror neuron system is defective or damaged, and our ability to empathize is
lost, the observe-and-guess method of theory theory may be the only option left.
Some scientists suspect this is what happens in autistic people, whose mental
disorder prevents them from understanding the intentions and motives of others.
Tests
underway
The
idea is that the mirror neuron systems of autistic individuals are somehow impaired
or deficient, and that the resulting "mind-blindness" prevents them
from simulating the experiences of others. For autistic individuals, experience
is more observed than lived, and the emotional undercurrents that govern so much
of our human behavior are inaccessible. They guess the mental states of others
through explicit theorizing, but the end result is a list -- mechanical and impersonal
-- of actions, gestures and expressions void of motive, intent, or emotion.
Several
labs are now testing the hypothesis that autistic individuals have a mirror neuron
deficit and cannot simulate the mental states of others.
One recent
experiment by Hugo Theoret and colleagues at the University of Montreal showed
that mirror neurons normally active during the observation of hand movements in
non-autistic individuals are silent in those who have autism.
"You
either simulate with mirror neurons, or the mental states of others are completely
precluded to you," said Iacoboni.