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Broken hearts are as painful as broken bones
: Study
ANI
WASHINGTON: A University
of California-led team of psychologists has found that two key
areas of the brain respond to the pain of rejection in the same
way as physical pain.
"While everyone accepts that physical pain is real, people are
tempted to think that social pain is just in their heads. But
physical and social pain may be more similar than we realized,"
says Matthew D. Lieberman, one of the paper's three authors and
an assistant professor of psychology at the UCLA.
"In the English language, we use physical metaphors to describe
social pain like 'a broken heart' and 'hurt feelings'. Now, we
see that there is good reason for this," says Naomi I. Eisenberger,
a UCLA Ph.D. candidate in social psychology and the study's lead
author.
Eisenberger and Lieberman used functional magnetic resonance imaging
(FMRI) to monitor the brain activity in 13 UCLA undergraduates
while they played a computer ball tossing game designed to provoke
feelings of social exclusion.
In the first of the three rounds, the experimenters instructed
the participants just to watch the two other players because "technical
difficulties" prevented them from participating. In the second
round, the students were included in the ball tossing game, but
were excluded from the last three-quarters of the third round
by the other players.
While the undergraduates later reported feeling excluded in the
third round, FMRI scans revealed elevated activity during the
first and third rounds in the anterior cingulate. Located in the
center of the brain, the cingulate has been implicated in generating
the adverse experience of physical pain.
"Rationally we can say being excluded doesn't matter, but rejection
of any form still appears to register automatically in the brain,
and the mechanism appears to be similar to the experience of physical
pain," Lieberman said.
When the undergraduates were conscious of being snubbed, cingulate
activity directly responded to the amount of distress that they
later reported feeling at being excluded. The psychologists theorize
that the pain of being rejected might have evolved because of
the importance of social bonds for the survival of most mammals.
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