Providing “targeted” social support to other people in need
activates regions of the brain involved in parental care– which may help
researchers understand the positive health effects of social ties, reports a
study in Psychosomatic Medicine: Journal of Biobehavioral Medicine,
the official journal of the American Psychosomatic
Society. The journal is published in the Lippincott Portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.
By comparison, providing “untargeted” support such as giving to charity
does not have the same neurobiological effects, according to the new research
by Tristen K. Inagaki, PhD, and Lauren P. Ross, BA, of University of
Pittsburgh. “Our results highlight the unique benefits of giving targeted
support and elucidate neural pathways by which giving support may lead to
health,” the researchers write.
Study May Show ‘Neural Pathway’ By Which Providing Support Improves Health
The researchers performed a pair of experiments to evaluate brain responses
to providing different kinds of social support. In the first study, 45
volunteers performed a “giving support” task where they had a chance to win
rewards for someone close to them who needed money (targeted support), for
charity (untargeted support), or for themselves. As predicted, participants
felt more socially connected, and felt that their support was more effective,
when giving targeted social support.
The subjects then underwent an emotional ratings task including functional
MRI scanning to assess activation of specific brain areas when giving social
support. Providing support, regardless of who received the support, was linked
to increased activation of the ventral striatum (VS) and septal area (SA) –
regions previously linked to parental care behaviors in animals. However, only
higher activation of the SA when people gave targeted support was associated
with lower activity in a brain structure called the amygdala – sometimes linked
to fear and stress responses.
In the second study, 382 participants provided information on their
behavior in giving support (prosocial behavior) and underwent a different
emotional ratings task with functional MRI scanning. Once again, those who
reported giving more targeted support to others also showed reduced activity in
the amygdala. In both studies, giving untargeted support (such as giving to
charity) was unrelated to amygdala activity.
“Humans thrive off social connections and benefit when they act in the
service of others’ well-being,” according to the authors. A previous study by
Dr. Inagaki, also published in Psychosomatic Medicine, found
that giving social support has positive effects on brain areas involved in
stress and reward responses. That study suggested that providing support – not
just receiving it – may be an important contributor to the physical and mental
health benefits of social support.
The new study adds further evidence that giving targeted support may be
uniquely beneficial. Both targeted and untargeted support are linked to
increased SA activity, supporting the “warm glow” theory of providing support:
we help others, directly or indirectly, simply because it “feels good.”
But the link between increased SA activation and decreased amygdala
activity “suggests a neural pathway by which giving support ultimately
influence health that is specific to targeted forms of support-giving, such as
giving to specific people we know are in need,” Dr. Inagaki and Ms. Ross write.
The authors note that their study cannot show a cause-and-effect of providing
support on activation of the SA or amygdala. They also point out that providing
targeted social support does not always lead to improved health – for example,
prolonged caregiving for an ill family member can be detrimental to health.
The study adds to previous evidence that providing social support to others
“may be an overlooked contributor to the well-known link between social ties
and health,” Dr. Inagaki and Ms. Ross write. They conclude: “Giving targeted
support to an identifiable individual in need is uniquely associated with
reduced amygdala activity thereby contributing to understanding of how and when
giving support may lead to health.”
Journal article:
https://insights.ovid.com/crossref?an=00006842-201810000-00006
https://insights.ovid.com/crossref?an=00006842-201810000-00006
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