Abstract
Loneliness is a painful condition associated with increased risk for premature mortality. The formation of new, positive social relationships can alleviate feelings of loneliness, but requires rapid trustworthiness decisions during initial encounters and it is still unclear how loneliness hinders interpersonal trust. Here, a multimodal approach including behavioral, psychophysiological, hormonal, and neuroimaging measurements is used to probe a trust-based mechanism underlying impaired social interactions in loneliness. Pre-stratified healthy individuals with high loneliness scores (n = 42 out of a screened sample of 3678 adults) show reduced oxytocinergic and affective responsiveness to a positive conversation, report less interpersonal trust, and prefer larger social distances compared to controls (n = 40). Moreover, lonely individuals are rated as less trustworthy compared to controls and identified by the blinded confederate better than chance. During initial trust decisions, lonely individuals exhibit attenuated limbic and striatal activation and blunted functional connectivity between the anterior insula and occipitoparietal regions, which correlates with the diminished affective responsiveness to the positive social interaction. This neural response pattern is not mediated by loneliness-associated psychological symptoms. Thus, the results indicate compromised integration of trust-related information as a shared neurobiological component in loneliness, yielding a reciprocally reinforced trust bias in social dyads.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 2102076 |
Pages (from-to) | e2102076 |
Journal | Advanced Science |
Volume | 8 |
Issue number | 21 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 3 Nov 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The authors thank Paul Jung for programming assistance and Alexandra Goertzen‐Patin for proofreading the manuscript. S.G.S.‐T., R.H., and D.S. were supported by a German‐Israel Foundation for Scientific Research and Development grant (GIF, I‐1428‐105.4/2017).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Advanced Science published by Wiley-VCH GmbH
Keywords
- interpersonal trust
- loneliness
- oxytocin
- social brain
- social interaction
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Medicine (miscellaneous)
- Chemical Engineering (all)
- Materials Science (all)
- Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)
- Engineering (all)
- Physics and Astronomy (all)