Vrtička Pascal, Vuilleumier Patrik
Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, University of Geneva Geneva, Switzerland.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2012 Jul 17;6:212. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00212. eCollection 2012.
Since its first description four decades ago, attachment theory (AT) has become one of the principal developmental psychological frameworks for describing the role of individual differences in the establishment and maintenance of social bonds between people. Yet, still little is known about the neurobiological underpinnings of attachment orientations and their well-established impact on a range of social and affective behaviors. In the present review, we summarize data from recent studies using cognitive and imaging approaches to characterize attachment styles and their effect on emotion and social cognition. We propose a functional neuroanatomical framework to integrate the key brain mechanisms involved in the perception and regulation of social emotional information, and their modulation by individual differences in terms of secure versus insecure (more specifically avoidant, anxious, or resolved versus unresolved) attachment traits. This framework describes how each individual's attachment style (built through interactions between personal relationship history and predispositions) may influence the encoding of approach versus aversion tendencies (safety versus threat) in social encounters, implicating the activation of a network of subcortical (amygdala, hippocampus, striatum) and cortical (insula, cingulate) limbic areas. These basic and automatic affective evaluation mechanisms are in turn modulated by more elaborate and voluntary cognitive control processes, subserving mental state attribution and emotion regulation capacities, implicating a distinct network in medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), superior temporal sulcus (STS), and temporo-parietal junction (TPJ), among others. Recent neuroimaging data suggest that affective evaluation is decreased in avoidantly but increased in anxiously attached individuals. In turn, although data on cognitive control is still scarce, it points toward a possible enhancement of mental state representations associated with attachment insecurity and particularly anxiety. Emotion regulation strategies such as reappraisal or suppression of social emotions are also differentially modulated by attachment style. This research does not only help better understand the neural underpinnings of human social behavior, but also provides important insights on psychopathological conditions where attachment dysregulation is likely to play an important (causal) role.
自四十年前首次被描述以来,依恋理论(AT)已成为描述个体差异在人与人之间社会联系的建立和维持中所起作用的主要发展心理学框架之一。然而,关于依恋取向的神经生物学基础及其对一系列社会和情感行为的既定影响,我们仍然知之甚少。在本综述中,我们总结了近期研究的数据,这些研究采用认知和成像方法来表征依恋风格及其对情绪和社会认知的影响。我们提出了一个功能性神经解剖学框架,以整合参与社会情感信息感知和调节的关键脑机制,以及它们如何通过安全型与不安全型(更具体地说是回避型、焦虑型,或解决型与未解决型)依恋特质的个体差异进行调节。该框架描述了每个人的依恋风格(通过个人关系历史和倾向之间的相互作用形成)如何在社交互动中影响接近与回避倾向(安全与威胁)的编码,这涉及到皮层下(杏仁核、海马体、纹状体)和皮层(脑岛、扣带回)边缘区域网络的激活。这些基本的自动情感评估机制反过来又受到更精细和自主的认知控制过程的调节,这些过程支持心理状态归因和情绪调节能力,涉及内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC)、颞上沟(STS)和颞顶联合区(TPJ)等不同的神经网络。最近的神经成像数据表明,回避型依恋个体的情感评估降低,而焦虑型依恋个体的情感评估增加。反过来,虽然关于认知控制的数据仍然很少,但它表明与依恋不安全感尤其是焦虑相关的心理状态表征可能会增强。重新评估或抑制社会情绪等情绪调节策略也受到依恋风格的不同调节。这项研究不仅有助于更好地理解人类社会行为的神经基础,还为依恋失调可能起重要(因果)作用的精神病理状况提供了重要见解。