“…Earlier work suggested that the hippocampus may be spontaneously recruited when thinking about others' social pain (e.g., others' suffering arising from social rejection, grief, or other psychological pain; Immordino-Yang & Singh, 2013 see also Perhs, Zaki, Taruffi, Kuchinke, & Koelsch, 2018) and that sharing painful and similar experiences with other people increases trust, empathic concern, and cooperation (e.g., Bastian, Jetten, & Ferris, 2014;Hodges, Kiel, Kramer, Veach, & Villanueva, 2010). Newer developing research is emerging that directly investigates the reactivation of memory online during empathy for pain tasks, revealing that empathy for others' pain increases when people reported that they recalled a related autobiographical memory as well as it's neural basis (Meconi et al, 2019;Wagner, Rutgen, & Lamm, 2019). For example, Wagner et al provide some preliminary evidence that increased pattern similarity between fist-hand pain experience and empathy for others' pain within the hippocampus, TPJ, retrosplenial cortex, and anterior insula.…”