最优校准假说:生活史如何调节大脑的社会痛苦网络。

Frontiers in evolutionary neuroscience Pub Date : 2012-07-05 eCollection Date: 2012-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnevo.2012.00010
David S Chester, Richard S Pond, Stephanie B Richman, C Nathan Dewall
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引用次数: 27

摘要

越来越多的研究表明,大脑对身体和社会伤害的反应是相似的。这两种经历都与背前扣带皮层(dACC)和前脑岛的活动有关。dACC和前脑岛的双重功能强调了维持人际关系的进化重要性。尽管社会伤害在进化中占有重要地位,但个体对社会排斥的疼痛反应却存在很大差异。例如,我们实验室的工作表明,大脑的社交疼痛反应受到依恋类型的调节:焦虑型依恋与更大的强度有关,而回避型依恋与dACC和脑岛激活的强度较低有关。为了解释社会疼痛网络中的这些不同反应,我们提出了最优校准假设,该假设认为,早期生活史阶段的社会排斥变化会改变个体社会疼痛网络的阈值,从而导致疼痛敏感性会因挥发性社会排斥而增加,并因慢性社会排斥而降低。此外,当个体在特定的生活史阶段(例如,青年时期的潜在伴侣,婴儿期和儿童期的父母)被拒绝时,社会痛苦反应可能会加剧。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The optimal calibration hypothesis: how life history modulates the brain's social pain network.

A growing body of work demonstrates that the brain responds similarly to physical and social injury. Both experiences are associated with activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) and anterior insula. This dual functionality of the dACC and anterior insula underscores the evolutionary importance of maintaining interpersonal bonds. Despite the weight that evolution has placed on social injury, the pain response to social rejection varies substantially across individuals. For example, work from our lab demonstrated that the brain's social pain response is moderated by attachment style: anxious-attachment was associated with greater intensity and avoidant-attachment was associated with less intensity in dACC and insula activation. In an attempt to explain these divergent responses in the social pain network, we propose the optimal calibration hypothesis, which posits variation in social rejection in early life history stages shifts the threshold of an individual's social pain network such that the resulting pain sensitivity will be increased by volatile social rejection and reduced by chronic social rejection. Furthermore, the social pain response may be exacerbated when individuals are rejected by others of particular importance to a given life history stage (e.g., potential mates during young adulthood, parents during infancy and childhood).

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