Karen D Rudolph, Megan M Davis, Haina H Modi, Haley V Skymba, Megan Finnegan, Katherine Haigler, Rebekah B Clapham, Zihua Ye, Jillian Dodson, Eva H Telzer
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Elevated interpersonal stress exposure was associated with more depression in girls who showed dampened but not heightened activation in the salience and social processing networks in response to threat (vs. reward). In the context of low interpersonal stress, however, dampened activation to threat (vs. reward) was associated with particularly low levels of depression. These effects were partially accounted for by self-reported loneliness. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
当代情感神经科学的观点考虑了青少年发展的社会线索的神经调节可能的权衡。将这些观点与强调青春期强烈归属感需求的人际关系理论相结合,本研究考察了暴露于自然发生的人际压力源与孤独和抑郁之间的差异,这取决于青春期女孩对社会威胁(非归属感)和奖励(归属感)线索的神经敏感性。少女86例(M age = 16.31, SD = 0.84;66.3%的白人)在fMRI扫描期间完成了一项社会反馈任务,并报告了他们的孤独和抑郁。在女孩中,人际压力暴露的增加与更多的抑郁有关,她们对威胁(与奖励相比)的显著性和社会处理网络表现出抑制而不是增强的激活。然而,在人际关系压力较低的情况下,对威胁(相对于奖励)的抑制激活与特别低的抑郁水平相关。这些影响部分是由自我报告的孤独感造成的。这项研究支持了目前的趋势,即对青少年发展中社会线索的神经调节的适应价值进行更精细的研究,表明社会威胁与奖励敏感性的平衡可以通过塑造青春期女孩如何驾驭不同的社会环境来赋予情感风险或利益。
Emotional Trade-offs of Neural Sensitivity to Social Threat and Reward in Adolescent Girls.
Contemporary affective neuroscience perspectives consider possible trade-offs of neural attunement to social cues for adolescent development. Integrating these perspectives with interpersonal theories emphasizing robust belonging needs during adolescence, this study examined whether exposure to naturally occurring interpersonal stressors was differentially associated with loneliness and depression contingent on adolescent girls' neural sensitivity to cues indicating social threat (non-belonging) vs. reward (belonging). Eighty-six adolescent girls (M age = 16.31, SD = .84; 66.3% White) completed a social feedback task during an fMRI scan and reported on their loneliness and depression. Elevated interpersonal stress exposure was associated with more depression in girls who showed dampened but not heightened activation in the salience and social processing networks in response to threat (vs. reward). In the context of low interpersonal stress, however, dampened activation to threat (vs. reward) was associated with particularly low levels of depression. These effects were partially accounted for by self-reported loneliness. This research supports current trends toward developing a more refined perspective on the adaptational value of neural attunement to social cues for adolescent development, suggesting that the balance of social threat vs. reward sensitivity can confer emotional risks or benefits by shaping how adolescent girls navigate diverse social contexts.