Department of Clinical, Health and Neuropsychology, Leiden University Institute for Psychological Research, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Psychol Sci. 2010 Nov;21(11):1575-81. doi: 10.1177/0956797610384746. Epub 2010 Sep 28.
Freezing is a common defensive response in animals threatened by predators. It is characterized by reduced body motion and decreased heart rate (bradycardia). However, despite the relevance of animal defense models in human stress research, studies have not shown whether social threat cues elicit similar freeze-like responses in humans. We investigated body sway and heart rate in 50 female participants while they were standing on a stabilometric force platform and viewing cues that were socially threatening, socially neutral, and socially affiliative (angry, neutral, and happy faces, respectively). Posturographic analyses showed that angry faces (compared with neutral faces and happy faces) induced significant reductions in body sway. In addition, the reduced body sway for angry faces was accompanied by bradycardia and correlated significantly with subjective anxiety. Together, these findings indicate that spontaneous body responses to social threat cues involve freeze-like behavior in humans that mimics animal freeze responses. These findings open avenues for studying human freeze responses in relation to various sociobiological markers and social-affective disorders.
冻结是动物受到捕食者威胁时的一种常见防御反应。其特征为身体运动减少和心率降低(心动过缓)。然而,尽管动物防御模型在人类应激研究中具有相关性,但研究尚未表明社会威胁线索是否会在人类中引起类似的冻结样反应。我们在 50 名女性参与者站立在平衡测力平台上时,调查了他们的身体晃动和心率,同时观看了具有社会威胁性、社会中性和社会亲和性的线索(分别为愤怒、中性和快乐面孔)。姿势分析显示,愤怒面孔(与中性面孔和快乐面孔相比)引起身体晃动明显减少。此外,愤怒面孔的身体晃动减少伴随着心动过缓,并且与主观焦虑显著相关。这些发现表明,对社会威胁线索的自发身体反应涉及人类的冻结样行为,类似于动物的冻结反应。这些发现为研究人类与各种社会生物学标记和社会情感障碍相关的冻结反应开辟了途径。