“…However, explicit ratings of pain intensity to pictures depicting a body part in pain were significantly lower in patients than in control groups, suggesting that at the same patients' empathy for others' pain might be attenuated by their lack of past pain experiences. However, in contrast to the convergent evidence above, patients with autobiographical memory impairments, such as amnesic patients, show little evidence of impaired empathy, at least for cold empathy, which seems to be spared (Rabin, Braverman, Gilboa, Stuss, & Rosenbaum, 2012;Rosenbaum, Stuss, Levine, & Tulving, 2007) or only mildly impaired (Beadle, Tranel, Cohen, & Duff, 2013;Staniloiu, Borsutzky, Woermann, & Markowitsch, 2013). In sum, current neuroimaging research provides strong evidence for a link between autobiographical memory and empathy, but lacks the critical evidence that autobiographical memories are actually retrieved in the service of empathy.…”