Prior neuroimaging studies of empathy have shown that by observing another's emotional state, part of the neural circuitry underlying the same state becomes active in oneself, whether it is disgust, pain or social emotions (see
[6]–
[9]. Such findings are consistent with the perception-action model of empathy
[10]. Recently, researchers have begun to investigate whether these empathy processes can be modulated by the implicit context of the empathic experience
[8],
[16]. We extended this contextual approach by showing that regions previously associated with empathic processes were modulated by voluntary regulation of one's emotional responses via the generation of compassion.
All participants exhibited stronger neural responses to all emotional sounds in the AI and ACC during compassion meditation than when at rest (), and experts exhibited stronger responses than novices to negative than to positive emotional sounds in somatosensory regions (SII, post-central gyrus) during compassion meditation than when at rest (see .A–B, ). Those regions in which stronger activity was measured are also known to participate in affect and feelings
[12],
[13],
[14]. Furthermore, the amplitude of the activity in several of these regions, in particular the insula cortex, was associated: with the degree to which participants perceived that they had successfully entered into the meditative state (.D–E and 2.C–D, ); with expertise of compassion meditation (.A–C, 2.A–B, and ); and with the relevancy of the emotional sounds during the compassion meditation (stronger response to the voice of a distressed person than that of a laughing baby, or than to background noise from a crowd, 1.A–C, 2.A–B, ). The peaks of activation in the IA (x

=

37, y

=

15, z

=

1, ) and ACC (one at (x

=

9, y

=

6, z

=

42), and one at (x

=

5, y

=

24, z

=

37), )) found in the main effect of state (compassion vs. rest) overlap with regions previously found to be activated during empathy for others' suffering (x

=

39, y

=

12, z

=

3) for IA and ACC (x

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−9, y

=

6, z

=

42) and (x

=

0, y

=

24, z

=

33) from
[6]. A similar interaction effect in the somatosensory cortex was found in this brain region, reflecting greater activation when adopting the first-person vs. third-person perspectives, and even more during an emotional vs neutral context
[7]. These findings suggest that cultivating the intent to be compassionate and kind can enhance empathic responses to social stimuli. The functional group difference found in insula is consistent with larger cortical thickness in this region among meditators than among controls, in a group of meditators trained in a tradition that usually contains a compassion meditation component
[17]. The group difference in BOLD signal is consistent with the group difference in amplitude of gamma-band (25–50 Hz) oscillations in EEG data recorded from the same group of long-term meditators during the same meditation
[3].
We found greater activation in a circuit commonly recruited during the reading of others' mental states (TPJ, pSTS, mPFC, PCC/Prc., –. , and ) in response to sounds during compassion than when at rest
[9],
[18],
[19]. This pattern was strongly modulated by expertise in particular in the PCC/Prc and right pSTS/ TPJ (.C–D, ). Many of these regions were lateralized to the right () more strongly for experts than for novices, particularly in the right TPJ (.E, ). The right lateralization of pSTS is in accordance with previous work on social cognition
[9],
[18]. Of particular interest to our study, the link between expertise in compassion and the activation in the right pSTS is consistent with the finding that pSTS activation predicts self-reported altruism
[20]. The activation peak in pSTS in this study was part of the cluster illustrated in .C (x

=

46, y

=

−64, z

=

23) and of the cluster from the main effect of state (x

=

41, y

=

−48, z

=

45, ). Our finding of greater activation in the right pSTS/ TPJ among experts suggests that the meditative practice of compassion may enhance emotion sharing, as well as perspective taking.
In addition to the right pSTS/TPJ, the scope of the brain circuitry which showed an interaction between expertise and meditation also encompassed the right IFG (). The TPJ and IFG together compose a circuitry classically viewed as an attentional system specialized to detect behaviorally relevant stimuli, in particular when the stimuli are salient or unexpected
[21]. A similar increase of activation in the amygdalae, linked to appraisal of emotional stimuli, (.A–B, ) further supports this view. The greater increase in activation of this circuitry in experts than in novices suggests that experts might be more primed to detect salient events, such as the suffering of others, during this voluntarily induced state. Even if attention might have influenced the processing of emotional stimuli and thus have increased emotional arousal, the fact that the activation in the insula was still present when we regressed out changes in pupil diameter induced by the sounds supports the role of insula not only in emotional arousal, but also in empathic processes.
Most of the areas included in the “mentation network” also overlap with the proposed “default mode” or “resting state” networks (typically mPFC, rostral ACC, PCC, Prc and posterior lateral cortices, for review
[19],
[22]). A wide range of tasks have been found to produce a relative decrease in BOLD signal in this network in comparison to a passive resting state, implying that this network is also active during the resting state. Given recent interest in this network, it is worth noting the experts' ability to generate states that can selectively produce BOLD deactivation (rest, .A, 4.E) and activation (meditation, .B and 4.F) in precuneus and TPJ in response to sounds, suggesting that these regions were more activate during rest than meditation prior to the presentation of the sounds. Future study investigating in more detail the phenomenology of these states might shed new light on the functionality of this circuitry.
Because novices and experts differ in many respects other than simply the extent of meditative training (such as culture of origin and first language), longitudinal research that follows individuals over time in response to compassion training will be needed to further substantiate our findings. It will also be essential to assess the impact of such emotional training on behavioral tasks involving altruism, and, more generally, emotional reactivity and regulation. The long-term question is to evaluate whether repeated practice in such techniques could result in enduring changes in affective and social style
[23]. The fact that large and systematic changes in brain function were observed in response to auditory emotional stimuli presented during the meditative practice of compassion, and the fact that robust differences were observed between experts and novices, suggests that the next steps to evaluate the behavioral impact of this training and to longitudinally assess its effects are warranted.