# The influence of class mobility on pain empathy among the wealthy in collectivist cultures: evidence from ERPs

**Authors:** Bingni Huang, Jinwen He, Xiaomin Wu, Jiaxian Luo, Yanshan Zhang, Pinchao Luo

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2025.1675144 · Frontiers in Human Neuroscience · 2026-01-21

## TL;DR

This study explores how class mobility affects the wealthy's empathy for the poor in collectivist cultures using brain activity measurements.

## Contribution

It provides neural-level evidence on how upward mobility and positive appraisal influence pain empathy in collectivist contexts.

## Key findings

- Upward mobility reduced early neural responses to pain in low-status targets.
- Positive evaluations of mobility also decreased early pain-related brain activity.
- Late brain responses to pain remained stable regardless of mobility or evaluation.

## Abstract

As a privileged group within the social structure, the wealthy play a significant role in social philanthropy and public welfare initiatives, making their empathic capacity a subject of considerable interest. Previous research has found that wealthy individuals who have experienced upward class mobility paradoxically demonstrate reduced empathy toward the poor. However, these studies were predominantly conducted in individualistic cultural contexts, leaving the collectivist cultural perspective largely unexplored.

The present study employed a virtual-society paradigm to experimentally simulate class mobility in a collectivist context. Objective mobility direction (upward vs. horizontal) and subjective evaluation of mobility (positive vs. negative) were manipulated to construct four types of wealthy roles (upward-positive, upward-negative, horizontal-positive, horizontal-negative). Chinese university students from a collectivist cultural background were instructed to sequentially adopt each wealthy role and judge painful versus neutral pictures of the same low-status target, while event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded.

The results revealed that in the early N2 component, under upward mobility conditions, pain stimuli elicited significantly smaller N2 amplitudes compared to neutral stimuli, while no significant difference was observed under horizontal mobility conditions. In positive evaluation conditions, pain stimuli evoked significantly smaller N2 amplitudes than neutral stimuli, whereas no significant difference emerged in negative evaluation conditions. For the late LPP component, pain stimuli consistently elicited significantly larger LPP amplitudes than neutral stimuli, regardless of either the objective direction of class mobility or subjective evaluation.

These findings suggest that, within this simulated class-mobility context, upward mobility experiences and positive appraisal primarily influence early neural processing of the poor target’s pain, while later evaluative processing remains relatively stable. This study provides neural-level evidence for understanding how class mobility affects pain empathy among the wealthy in collectivist cultures, thereby enriching research on the relationship between social stratification and pain empathy.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

50 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12868158/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12868158