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80beats

Posts Tagged ‘emotions’

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Happiness Spreads Like the Plague

happyHappiness is catching and spreads like the flu, according to a study that followed a whole community of people for 20 years. The effect of one happy person could ripple through three degrees of separation, researchers report. “It is sometimes said that you can’t be happier than your least happy child. It is truly amazing to discover that when you replace the word ‘child’ with ‘best friend’s neighbor’s uncle,’ the sentence is still true,” [Boston Globe] said psychologist Daniel Gilbert, who was not involved in the study. The researchers liken the pattern of happiness transmission to the spread of a virus: those with the most number of happy contacts are the mostly likely to catch the happy bug.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal, followed more than 4,700 people living in Framingham, Massachusetts from 1983 to 2003. The participants answered periodic questionnaires about their emotional well-being and listed the names of relatives, friends, and co-workers, many of whom were also participating in the study. Researchers found that happiness wasn’t scattered evenly throughout the population but instead seemed to spread through social networks. “Happiness is like a stampede,” said [co-author] Nicholas Christakis… “Whether you’re happy depends not just on your own actions and behaviors and thoughts, but on those of people you don’t even know” [AP].

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December 5th, 2008 Tags: depression & happiness, emotions, infectious diseases, mental health, obesity
by Nina Bai in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 2 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Teenage Bullies are Rewarded With Pleasure, Brain Scans Show

bullyIt’s no fun being bullied, but new research supports what many teenagers have long suspected: A victim’s pain may be a bully’s gain. A new brain imaging study of aggressive teenage boys found that watching others being bullied triggered parts of their brains associated with pleasure. “It is entirely possible their brains are lighting in the way they are because they experience seeing pain in others as exciting and fun and pleasurable,”[Reuters] said co-author Dr. Benjamin Lahey.

The study subjects were 16 boys 16 to 18 years old, half of whom had aggressive conduct disorder and half of whom had no behavioral disorder. While their brains were hooked up to functional MRIs, the boys were shown video clips of people getting hurt either by accident, such as having a heavy object dropped on their hands, or by intentional actions by others, such as someone stomping on their feet. Lahey said he expected an emotionally indifferent response to pain from subjects with conduct disorder, a mental disorder characterized by aggressive, destructive or harmful behavior towards other people and animals and can include theft, substance abuse and sexual promiscuity, according to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Instead, fMRI scans showed a strong but highly atypical emotional response [ABC News].

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November 7th, 2008 Tags: emotions, mental health
by Nina Bai in Mind & Brain | 11 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Warm Hands Give People a Friendly, Generous Outlook


coffee heartVolunteers who held a warm cup of coffee in their hands were more likely to rate other people as warm, generous, and sociable, a new study has found, in contrast to those subjects who cradled a cup of ice coffee. In a second experiment, people who held a heating pad were more likely to give a small reward to a friend than keep it for themselves, in contrast to those who held an icepack. In other words, researchers concluded, holding something warm makes you feel more generous toward others; holding something cold makes you, well, cold and selfish [Scientific American].

The findings offer a neat reversal of another recent study, which also studied the phenomenon of the unconscious “priming” of thoughts; in that earlier study, volunteers who experienced social rejection were found to prefer a hot beverage to a cold one, presumably as a way to restore their good spirits. The message of both studies is that very subtle cues from our environment can significantly influence behavior and feelings, said lead researcher Dr. Lawrence Williams…. Physical and psychological concepts “are much more closely aligned in the mind than we have previously appreciated,” said Williams [AP].

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October 24th, 2008 Tags: emotions, senses
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | 2 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

For Obese Women, a Milkshake Brings Less Pleasure to the Brain


milkshakeIn a counterintuitive new study, researchers have found that obese women get less pleasure from drinking a chocolate milkshake than average-weight women, and suggest that obese women are therefore more likely to overeat in an attempt to get that high. Researchers used a fMRI brain scanner to record women’s levels of the pleasure-providing brain chemical dopamine while they were sipping milkshakes, and found that obese women had a muted pleasure response.

They also studied a dopamine-regulating gene variant that has previously been linked to obesity, and showed that women with this variant had the lowest dopamine levels and were also very likely to gain weight over the ensuing year. Dopamine expert Nora Volkow says this furthers the research on the genetic component of obesity: “It takes the gene associated with greater vulnerability for obesity and asks the question why. What is it doing to the way the brain is functioning that would make a person more vulnerable to compulsively eat food and become obese?” [AP]

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October 17th, 2008 Tags: depression & happiness, dopamine, drugs & addiction, emotions, genes & health, obesity
by Eliza Strickland in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Feeling Powerless? Grab Your Lucky Rabbit’s Foot


rabbit feetPeople who feel that they lack control while participating in lab experiments are more likely to see patterns where none exist, researchers say, in a finding that helps explain persistent beliefs in superstitions and conspiracy theories. In a new study, researchers manipulated volunteers’ perception of control and then watched the insecure subjects find connections where none existed in an apparent attempt to restore a sense of order to the world.

In one experiment, researchers gave half the volunteers a feeling of powerlessness and confusion by randomly scoring them right and wrong (and mostly wrong) on a series of questions. Then the volunteers had to find patterns. In one task, they were asked to find faint images in grainy patterns of dots. Half of the pictures had images and the others were random dots. While people in both groups correctly spotted the images, the group that felt they lacked control from a previous part of the experiment also “saw” images in 43 percent of pictures that were not there [Reuters].

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October 3rd, 2008 Tags: decisions, emotions, senses, superstitions
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | 6 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Teenage Hoodlums Can Blame Bad Behavior on Hormones, Study Says


angry aggressive guyTeenage boys with behavior problems may be able to blame their brain chemistry, according to a new study. Psychologists studied boys with a history of antisocial behavior and measured their levels of the hormone cortisol, which usually surges during stressful situations, causing people to focus and behave more cautiously. They found that the troubled boys didn’t have the normal cortisol spike when they were put under stress, suggesting that they weren’t getting a chemical signal to regulate their emotions and actions.

Researchers say the findings suggest that some bad behavior should be considered a form of mental illness. “Most research has looked at social factors like peer groups, family life and socioeconomic factors,” said [lead researcher] Graeme Fairchild…. “These findings basically indicate that antisocial behavior is probably more biologically based than many people recognize and is similar to conditions like depression and anxiety” [Reuters].

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October 1st, 2008 Tags: cortisol, decisions, emotions, hormones, mental health
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | No Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Researchers Discover Why People Overbid on Ebay: Fear


gavelEver wondered what causes the spate of wild bidding in the last few minutes of an Ebay auction? Scientists say they now have answer: The irrational behavior is caused by people’s fear of losing, not their desire to win. While economists have recognized the concept of “loss aversion” for some time, a new set of experiments used brain scans and lab experiments to show how strongly the phenomenon plays out in auctions, and how it’s tied to overbidding.

In the first experiment, test subjects participated in either a lottery or an auction. During the games, scientists watched the responses of the subjects’ striata—the brain’s reward center—using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The elation of winning was the same in both games, but the agony of defeat was crushing for losers of the auction. After auction, brain activity in the loser’s reward centers decreased substantially. But it hardly blipped when the person lost a lottery [Ars Technica]. What’s more, auction losers who had the steepest declines in striata activity were more likely to have overbid during the auction.

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September 26th, 2008 Tags: auctions, decisions, Ebay, economics, emotions
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | No Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Social Isolation Makes People Crave a Warm Bowl of Soup


hot bowl soupA new psychological study has found that social exclusion made test subjects feel literally cold, and increased their preference for warm beverages and soup. It’s the latest finding from the field of embodied cognition, in which researchers have shown that the language of metaphor can activate physical sensations, and vice versa…. “We know that being excluded is psychologically painful,” said the lead author, Chen-Bo Zhong… “and here we found that it feels just like it’s described in metaphors,” like icy stare and frosty reception [The New York Times].

Researchers conducted two experiments in the study, which was published in the journal Psychological Science [article not yet online]. In the first, they divided 65 students into two groups. They asked the first group to recall a time when others left them out. The second group recalled a time when they were included by others. In the middle of this, purportedly in response to maintenance staff, they were asked to estimate the temperature of the room [WebMD]. They found that the students who had been remembering an emotionally painful moment of rejection estimated that the room was much colder than the other students.

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September 17th, 2008 Tags: emotions, senses
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | 2 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Mammals Have a Nose for Danger (Literally)


mouse danger noseA mouse’s nose has a cluster of specialized cells that respond to the chemical signals sent out by fellow mice that are in distress, researchers report, meaning that mice can literally smell fear. A lump of nerve cells in the nose tip called the Grueneberg ganglion responds to the “fear pheromones” of imperiled creatures, sending a signal straight to the brain. As Grueneberg ganglia are known to exist in rodents, cats, apes, and humans, researchers say it’s likely that the cells perform the same function in all mammals.

In a new study, researchers dosed water dishes with mouse alarm pheromones, and put the dishes in cages with both normal mice and mice whose ganglia had been removed. The contrast was very striking, [lead researcher Marie-Christine] Broillet said. “The normal mouse immediately gets scared and goes to the corner of the box and freezes,” she said. But mice without the ganglia carried on as before, seemingly unaware of the danger signals. Both groups were able to sniff out cookies hidden in their cages, however, suggesting the altered group’s sense of smell was otherwise unaffected [National Geographic News].

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August 22nd, 2008 Tags: emotions, evolution, fear, pheromones, senses, smell
by Eliza Strickland in Living World, Mind & Brain | 7 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

A Gay Man’s Brain Looks a Lot Like a Straight Woman’s Brain

brain scansThe debate over the roots of homosexuality is possibly the most contentious manifestation of the “nature versus nurture” argument; gay rights advocates, gay rights opponents, and scientists have all joined the fray, advancing and criticizing different theories. With a new brain imaging study, the “nature” proponents seem to have gained a point in their favor.

Swedish researchers did MRI scans of 50 heterosexual men and women and 40 homosexual men and women and found surprising parallels. The brains of lesbians and straight men were anatomically symmetrical while the brains of gay men and straight women had a larger right brain hemisphere.

The researchers also looked at the amygdala, a part of the brain that’s associated with emotions, and found that straight women and gay men both have more connections between the amygdala and brain regions associated with anxiety and mood disorders. Meanwhile, the amygdala of lesbians and straight men had more connections to the region that controls fight or flight reactions.

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June 16th, 2008 Tags: emotions, homosexuality, hormones
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | 6 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Facial Expressions Provide an Evolutionary Boost

afraid-face.jpgWhen confronted with something truly terrifying (say, for example, an irritated grizzly bear), most human faces assume the same expression, with bulging eyes and flaring nostrils. Researchers have long suspected that those facial adjustments serve some evolutionary purpose, but the mechanism has been unclear for over a century.

Now, a study presents an answer that seems rather obvious in retrospect. Those wide-open eyes and flared nostrils take in more sensory information, which helps when you’re trying to figure out how to evade swiping bear claws.

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June 16th, 2008 Tags: emotions, evolution, fear, senses
by Eliza Strickland in Living World, Mind & Brain | 1 Comment » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Eating Cheese and Meat May Boost Self-Control

roast turkey ThanksgivingHere’s one easy way to help avoid conflict and strife in your interactions with others: When you eat your three square meals a day, don’t skimp on the meats and cheeses.

Those foods contain high levels of the amino acid tryptophan, which the body needs to produce the neurotransmitter serotonin, a chemical in the brain that plays a role in regulating mood, aggression and social behavior. In a new study, test subjects with high serotonin levels responded less aggressively while making emotionally charged financial decisions in a test known as the ultimatum game.

(more…)

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June 6th, 2008 Tags: decisions, depression & happiness, emotions, nutrition, serotonin
by Eliza Strickland in Mind & Brain | 3 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

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      80beats is DISCOVER's news aggregator, weaving together the choicest tidbits from the best articles on the day's most compelling topics.

      80beats is written by Veronique Greenwood and Valerie Ross. This team darts through each day's science news faster than the ruby-throated hummingbird that beats its wings 80 times per second. Send ideas, tips, suggestions, and complaints to [azeeberg at discovermagazine dot com].



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