Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin...

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, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc [email protected]

Transcript of Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin...

Page 1: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

Reno 2010

Benjamin Schoendorff MSc [email protected]

Page 2: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Compassion (Wikipedia)(from Latin: "co-suffering") is a virtue — one

in which the emotional capacities of empathy and sympathy (for the suffering of others) are regarded as a cornerstone of greater social interconnectedness and humanism

Functional definition?

define compassion by its consequences

Page 3: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Neuroscience and compassionConceptual issuesIdentify the neural signature of

compassion?Possible functions:

Train compassion in novel ways (neurofeedback)

Discriminate ‘real’ vs ‘false’ compassion?…

What if what determines compassion are its social functions ?

Page 4: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

The trap…

How can I even be talking about this…

What do I really know about compassion ?

Who am I to speak of compassion ?.....

Here comes the judging mind…

Page 5: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Worse trap yet…

How can I even speak of neuroscience and compassion ?

I’m incompetent and in about 5 seconds, they’ll all realize what an idiot I am!

Page 6: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Self-referenceNegative emotionsPositive emotionsReward learning

Meanwhile at the neuro level…

Here’s my mPFC when I form judgments about myself (freely derived from Overwalle 2009)

I’ll bet my brain images and animations will make them think I know my stuff!

I’m an incompetent fool and I’m so nervous I’ll never get to the end of this talk

Page 7: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Self-referenceNegative emotionsPositive emotionsReward learning

Clinically what have we learned?

My therapy’s good becauseit lights up the right areas…Hey what if I could train

activation in these regions?

Page 8: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

I have these two metaphors…The brain as a muscle, compassion as tennis

Are Federer’s right arm muscles the source of his killer forehand?

What if we could train the exact same musclestructure andactivation patternsin a non tennis player ?

Page 9: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Training the activationWhat if I could train this muscle through

biofeedback (and no tennis experience)…

Will this make a better player?

Or this?...

Page 10: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Discriminating the good playerThis?

The physical shape of the activation?

Page 11: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Discriminating the good playerOr this ?

The act in context (as socially defined AARR)

Page 12: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

What of compassion?Does it look more like this ?...

Page 13: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Compassion as meditation

Form or function?

Personal or interactive practice?

Page 14: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

For social pain produces more activation in regions

involved in homeostatic regulation : ACC, AI, HT

For physical pain produces more activation in regions

related to the musculoskeletal system : PI, LPC (inc SMG) SPL

In the brain, compassion…

(Innordinno-Yang et al. 2009)

Page 15: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

And in our lives…Does it look more like this ?

Page 16: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

But can you have compassionwith no social interaction?

=compassion?

Page 17: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Limits of compassion

Necessary to connect and make room

Perhaps not enough to make

progress

Page 18: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Barriers to compassion

ACT / RFT perspective :

Part of the normal functions of the mind

Built into human language

Judging, comparing, finding wanting, self and others

No compassion without self-compassion…

Page 19: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Self-compassion1. Self-kindness – being kind and understanding

toward oneself in instances of pain or failure (acceptance) rather than being harshly self-critical (defusion)

2. Common humanity – perceiving one's experiences as part of the larger human experience rather than seeing them as separating and isolating (perspective taking)

3. Mindfulness – holding painful thoughts and feelings in balanced awareness (present moment, acceptance) rather than over-identifying with them (defusion) (Neff 2003)

Page 20: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Toward compassion

No genuine compassion without self-compassion… these are two sides of the same coin

To train the repertoire, therapists must have it

Compassionately making room for their own suffering and fully feeling their wish to alleviate suffering

Page 21: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Compassion, acceptance and defusion

Training compassion toward the judgmental self talk

Defusing from self and other judgments

Taking perspectiveMaking room for difficult thoughts and

feelingsMoving in valued directions, as ‘the

person I’d like to be’

Page 22: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

At last some data!

Anxiety and Mindfulness self-help book studyRCT vs waitlist 109 vs 187 50% in tx

BAI from (d =.71) BDI (d=.89) Penn State worry (d = .72)

Fear of fear (d = .67) Social anxiety (d =.43)

Process measures: MAAS (d = .55) increase from low up to average WBSI (d = .44) cut off of 53. From 58 to 47 d = .44 BAFT (John’s lab measure) (d = 1.17) from 80 to 45 (cutoff at 51). AAQ9 (d = .81) from clinical to normal SCS (Neff’s Self-Compassion scale) : (d = 1.29 ) QOLI (d = .71) from below 0 to 1.5

Page 23: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Better yet some mediational data!Anxiety and Mindfulness self-help book study

RCT vs waitlist 109 vs 187 50% in tx

Mediators for:For BAI : suppression and

fusion were the significant mediators

For BDI : AAQ, self-compassion, WBSI and fusion (but not mindfulness as per MAAS)

For QOL flexibility, self-compassion, defusion.

Page 24: Neuroscience, compassion, and the heart of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Reno 2010 Benjamin Schoendorff MSc benjamin.schoendorff@gmail.combenjamin.schoendorff@gmail.com.

Conclusion

Compassion lies at the heart of the ACT model

Brain pictures are interestingFrom a clinical point of view:

compassion and self compassion are still more usefully seen functionally and in terms of trainable behavioral repertoire rather than brain activation patterns