In a new brain imaging study published in the open-access journal PLoS ONE, Pascal Vrtička and colleagues at the Swiss National Center for
Affective Sciences hosted by the University of Geneva found that
visually identical facial expressions can produce different patterns of
responses in emotional brain areas when context changes their social
meanings, and that these patterns of social sensitivity are strongly
modulated by adult attachment style (i.e. how a person emotionally
perceives and responds to others during social interactions, thought to
be either secure, anxious or avoidant). In this study, the specific
brain substrates underlying these individual differences in reaction to
emotional stimuli are identified for the first time.
Vrtička
and colleagues manipulated the social significance of facial
expressions by presenting them in different contexts while participants
performed a pseudo-competitive game with virtual partners in the
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanner. The virtual
partners could either be from allied or opponent teams and would
display either a smiling or an angry expression in response to the
success (or failure) of the participant. A smile could thus be
perceived either as praising an accomplishment or mocking a failure,
and a frown either as a sign of reproach or frustration.
When
the virtual partners were seen as allies (i.e. smiling in response to
the success of the participant or looking angry when the participant
failed), happy faces activated the ventral striatum and ventral
tegmental area (areas of the brain associated with reward processing),
but this response was much weaker in participants with an avoidant
attachment style. Angry faces, on the other hand, increased the
activation of the amygdala (an area of the brain implicated in fear and
arousal), especially in participants with an anxious attachment style.
These activation patterns were very specific, because no response in
reward circuits or amygdala was found for facial expressions of virtual
partners seen as opponents. Instead, opponent's expressions led to
increased activity in brain regions associated with theory of mind and
alertness (superior temporal sulcus and anterior cingulate gyrus).
The
findings extend previous research into social emotion processing by
showing that specific expressions in faces are processed differently in
the human brain depending on the personality of the individual and the
social context where the faces are perceived.
Moreover, the
data provide novel biological support for a link between an
individual's adult attachment style and activity in brain systems implicated
in reward and threat processing. Because both the ventral striatum and
amygdala are key brain structures for learning and predicting
motivational outcomes, they may play a critical role for the
establishment of idiosyncratic affective responses to social cues based
on past experience or developmental history. Vrtička and colleagues
could for the first time capture the neural signatures of such
behaviours by showing that avoidant participant's brains responded much
less to the rewarding value of social support, whereas anxious
participants displayed increased threat- or distress-related brain
activity to social punishment.
Vrtička and colleagues suggest
that these data may ultimately help define appropriate intervention
strategies in clinical disorders of attachment and social functioning,
including social anxiety, social phobias and autism.
Source: EurekAlert (Press Release)
Wednesday, 06 August 2008 17:39
How A Facial Expression is Interpreted Depends on Situation and Viewer's Attachment Type
It is well appreciated that facial expressions play a major role in
non-verbal social communication among humans and other primates,
because faces provide rapid access to information about the identity as
well as the internal states and intentions of others. In his song, Mona
Lisa, Nat King Cole reflected on the motivations for Mona Lisa's
"mystic smile" and new data by scientists in Switzerland suggests that
both the social context of a person's facial expression and certain
facets of the viewer's personality could affect how our brain
interprets the social meaning of someone else's smile or frown.
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Keiron Walsh
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