“…Fan et al, 2011;Jauniaux et al, 2019;Kogler et al, 2020;Lamm et al, 2011;Schurz et al, 2021;Timmers et al, 2018). Remarkably, these activity patterns are highly similar to those measured when pain is experienced directly by oneself (Berluti et al, 2020;Braboszcz et al, 2017;Corradi-Dell'Acqua et al, 2011O'Connell et al, 2019;Qiao-Tasserit et al, 2018;Wagner et al, 2020;Zhou et al, 2020), and they are attenuated by those same analgesic procedures that regulate first-hand nociception, such as placebo or hypnosis (Braboszcz et al, 2017;Rütgen et al, 2015Rütgen et al, , 2021. These results suggest that others' pain is at least partly processed in an embodied (or empathetic) fashion, that is, by simulating its somatic and affective properties on one's own body (Bastiaansen et al, 2009;Bernhardt & Singer, 2012).…”