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Does Social Pain Really Hurt?. Social and Physical Pain. Physical Pain “unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage.”. Social Pain
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Social and Physical Pain • Physical Pain • “unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage.” • Social Pain • “distressing experience arising from the perception of actual or potential psychological distance from close others or a social group.”
Physiological Connections • Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC) • Periaqueductal Gray (PAG) • Opioids • Oxytocin
Anterior Cinculate Cortex (ACC) • Most Direct Evidence • Pain affect associated with activation… • Physical • Social Rejection
Hypnotic Suggestion • Physical Pain Experiments • PET Scans
Social Exclusion • fMRI Scan Experiment
Periaqueductal Gray (PAG) • Shown to be active… • Injury Detection • Bonding Behavior
Injury Detection • Experiments with rat pups and physical pain.
Bonding Behavior • Maternal behavior in rat mothers • Kyphosis • Nest transport • Defense of pups
Opioids • Important pain regulator • Signals adequacy of social conditions
Pain Regulation • Long known to ease pain
Signaling Adequacy of Social Conditions • Animal Research: rats and other animals… • Reduce separation Anxiety from isolation of pups
Oxytocin • Wide range of social behaviors • Regulation of physical pain
Wide Range of Social Behaviors Maternal Behavior • Aggression • Prairie Vole • Mountain Vole
Argued for pain regulation • Thermal Stimuli • Rats response
Social Connectedness • May only be possible for mammalian species: • Extended maternal care • Behaviors and Neural structures unique to mammals
Reptilian Ancestors • Two Behavioral Characteristics separating mammals from their reptilian ancestors : • Vocal communication • Nursing young
Importance of Vocalization • Cingulate Gyrus : • Role in distress vocalization • Ablation of cingulate gyrus • Rat Pup Survival Rate – 12%
Benefits of Sociality • Protection from environmental extremes • Antipredation • Feeding Efficiency • Population Stability • Division of labor • Resource Defense
Social pain in Human Species • Self Esteem • measure of how extensively an individual is included or excluded by others • Increasing rejection correlates with reduction in self esteem • Cyberball
Causes of Social Pain • Exclusion • Relational Devaluation • Result: hurt feelings
Advantages of Social Pain • Aversive stimuli leads to avoidance • - pain of isolation will motivate individual to reestablish relationships • - negative experience with a specific environment will lead to avoidance of environments with these conditions.
Overlap in physical and emotional pain • Cingulotomy • Procedure • Lesioning of ACC for treatment of chronic pain • Collateral Effects: • Patients able to feel the pain, but it no longer bothers them.
Overlap in physical and emotional pain • Opiate Based drugs • - Original function: • - Alleviating physical pain • - Morphine • - Collateral Effects: • - lessen social pain in animals and humans • - Narcotics • - Opium • - Heroin
Overlap in physical and emotional pain • Social Support • -cancer • -childbirth • -cardiac pain • -chronic pain • -post operative pain
Overlap in physical and emotional pain • Antidepressants • - Original function: • - reducing feelings of anxiety or depression • - Collateral Effects: • - alleviate physical pain • - now prescribed to treat chronic pain
DEEP QUESTIONS • Developmental: Does an organism’s stage of life have an effect on their ability to sense social pain? Would a person’s sense of social rejection be different if past experiences had been more or less intense in the context of past rejection? • Ecological: How does an environment, rich in social support, aid an individual to relieve physical and/or social pain? Is being rejected from a group enough of an environmental stimulus to evoke a strong enough social pain response for an individual to seek out a group in which it is socially accepted?
DEEP QUESTIONS Evolutionary: How did the mechanisms for physical pain and the mechanisms for social pain develop independently, but work cooperatively? How does the development of maternal care in modern mammalian species act as an adaptation from their reptilian ancestors? How did these adaptations increase fitness among mammals? Physiological: How similar is the neural mechanism for social pain to the neural mechanism for physical pain? Do similar hormones get released throughout the body in response to physical and emotional pain?
Works Cited Leary, Mark R., and Geoff MacDonald. "Why Does Social Exclusion Hurt? The Relationship Between Social and Physical Pain.." Psychological Bulletin 131(2005): 202-223. Retrieved on 11/05/07 from <http://www2.uni-jena.de/svw/igc/studies/ss04/MacDonald_Leary_2005_PB.pdf>.
Works Cited Eisenberger, Naomi I. and Matthew D. Lieberman. "Why Rejection Hurts: A Common Neural Alarm System for Physical and Social Pain." Science Direct 2004 1-17. Retrieved on 10/28/07 from <http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6VH9-4CMW4KX-1&_user=422010&_coverDate=07%2F31%2F2004&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000019958&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=422010&md5=4dbb8d8d7e27626998a87346e7c7b1b1>.