Lending a hand: social regulation of the neural response to threat.

Psychol Sci

Department of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 22904, USA.

Published: December 2006


Article Synopsis

  • Social contact, like holding hands, boosts emotional well-being, especially during stressful situations.
  • In an fMRI study, married women showed reduced brain activation related to threat responses when holding their husband’s hand compared to a stranger's hand or no hand at all.
  • The effectiveness of spousal hand-holding in reducing threat responses was linked to the quality of the marriage, with better marital quality leading to decreased neural activation in specific brain areas during spousal hand-holding.

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Article Abstract

Social contact promotes enhanced health and well-being, likely as a function of the social regulation of emotional responding in the face of various life stressors. For this functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, 16 married women were subjected to the threat of electric shock while holding their husband's hand, the hand of an anonymous male experimenter, or no hand at all. Results indicated a pervasive attenuation of activation in the neural systems supporting emotional and behavioral threat responses when the women held their husband's hand. A more limited attenuation of activation in these systems occurred when they held the hand of a stranger. Most strikingly, the effects of spousal hand-holding on neural threat responses varied as a function of marital quality, with higher marital quality predicting less threat-related neural activation in the right anterior insula, superior frontal gyrus, and hypothalamus during spousal, but not stranger, hand-holding.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01832.xDOI Listing

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