ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Friday, July 3, 2026
The Science of Loneliness
Loneliness has been described as a public health crisis, compared to
smoking in its effects on lifespan, and declared an epidemic by health
ministers in multiple countries. But until recently, science could say little
about what loneliness actually is inside the brain: what neurons fire, what
circuits activate, what the biological difference is between being alone and
feeling alone. A wave of new research is beginning to change that.
The neurons that register isolation
In 2025, Harvard neuroscientist Catherine Dulac published a study that may
be the most precise look yet at what loneliness does to the brain at the
cellular level. Her team at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute isolated female
mice for five days, with brief social reunions on alternating days, and used
genetic tools to map exactly which neurons became active during isolation and
which ones fired during reunion.
They found two distinct clusters in the hypothalamus, a brain region
involved in regulating hunger, thirst, and other survival drives. One cluster
activated during isolation and produced an aversive, hunger-like state: an
internal craving for company. A second cluster activated during reunion and
connected to the brain’s dopamine reward system, producing something that felt
like relief or satisfaction. The two circuits worked in opposition, like the
push and pull of appetite and satiation.
“Loneliness is not a mood. It is a
drive, like hunger,” Dulac said. “It has a specific neural substrate, and when
that drive is satisfied, the brain registers it as a reward.”
Touch as the
only resolution
One of the most striking findings from Dulac’s experiments was what did and
did not resolve the isolation signal. When mice were separated from each other
but could still see, smell, and hear their companions through a transparent
barrier, the loneliness neurons kept firing as if full isolation were in
effect. Only physical contact, specifically tactile interaction with another
mouse, quieted the circuit. The researchers compared this to being able to see
food through glass: awareness of the thing you need is not the same as having
it.
This may help explain why social media use, which provides visual and
textual contact but not physical presence, so often fails to relieve loneliness
and in some studies appears to worsen it. If the loneliness circuit evolved to
respond to physical co-presence, digital proximity may not speak the same
language.
Loneliness as a survival signal
Parallel work from Kay Tye’s lab at the Salk Institute and MIT has
identified loneliness-related circuits in the dorsal raphe nucleus, a brainstem
region involved in social motivation. Tye’s team found that isolating mice
caused a specific population of dopamine neurons to become hyperactive, priming
the animal to seek social contact urgently. When these neurons were
artificially activated in grouped mice, the mice behaved as if they had been
isolated, seeking out company even when company was already present.
Together, the Dulac and Tye findings point toward a view of loneliness not
as an emotional failure or a personality trait, but as a biological alarm
system. Social species need each other to survive. A brain that registers
isolation as aversive and social contact as rewarding has a selective advantage
over a brain that does not. Loneliness, on this view, is evolution’s way of
keeping social animals social.
What chronic loneliness does to the body
The biological effects of prolonged loneliness are well documented and
extend far beyond mood. Chronic loneliness is associated with elevated cortisol
and inflammatory markers, disrupted sleep architecture, impaired immune
function, and increased risk of cardiovascular disease. A widely cited analysis
by Julianne Holt-Lunstad found that social isolation increases mortality risk
by roughly 26%, comparable to smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
The new cellular research offers a possible mechanism: a loneliness drive
that never gets satisfied keeps the stress-related circuits in the hypothalamus
chronically activated. The same system that evolved to push animals toward
social contact in the short term becomes damaging when the craving goes unmet
for weeks or months or years.
The hardest question
What the neuroscience cannot yet answer is why some people feel lonely in a
crowd and others feel fine in extended solitude. Individual differences in the
sensitivity of these circuits, shaped by genetics, early experience, and
learned patterns of relating, probably account for much of that variation.
Dulac’s lab is now looking at how early social deprivation changes the
development of loneliness circuits in ways that may persist into adulthood.
What the research does establish, with increasing clarity, is that
loneliness is not a character flaw or a sign of weakness. It is what a working
brain feels when one of its core biological needs goes unmet. That reframing
may matter less for the science than for how we treat the people around us who
are quietly running on empty.
Source
·
Dulac, C., et al. (2025).
Hypothalamic circuits mediating the aversive state of social isolation. Howard Hughes Medical Institute / Harvard University.
·
Tye, K.M., et al. (2018). Social
reward and loneliness circuits in the dorsal raphe nucleus. Cell.
·
Holt-Lunstad, J., et al. (2015).
Loneliness and social isolation as risk factors for mortality. Perspectives on Psychological Science.

