Klackl Johannes, Jonas Eva, Kronbichler Martin
Department of Psychology, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria, Center for Neurocognitive Research, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria, and Neuroscience Institute, Christian Doppler-Clinic, Paracelsus Private Medical University, 5020 Salzburg, Austria
Department of Psychology, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria, Center for Neurocognitive Research, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria, and Neuroscience Institute, Christian Doppler-Clinic, Paracelsus Private Medical University, 5020 Salzburg, Austria.
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2014 Nov;9(11):1754-61. doi: 10.1093/scan/nst167. Epub 2013 Nov 11.
According to terror management theory, self-esteem serves as a buffer against existential anxiety. This proposition is well supported empirically, but its neuronal underpinnings are poorly understood. Therefore, in the present neuroimaging study, our aim was to test how self-esteem affects our neural circuitry activation when death-related material is processed. Consistent with previous findings, the bilateral insula responded less to death-related stimuli relative to similarly unpleasant, but death-unrelated sentences, an effect that might reflect a decrease in the sense of oneself in the face of existential threat. In anterior parts of the insula, this 'deactivation' effect was more pronounced for high self-esteem individuals, suggesting that the insula might be of core importance to understanding the anxiety-buffering effect of self-esteem. In addition, low self-esteem participants responded with enhanced activation to death-related over unpleasant stimuli in bilateral ventrolateral prefrontal and medial orbitofrontal cortex, suggesting that regulating death-related thoughts might be more effortful to these individuals. Together, this suggests that the anxiety-buffering effect of self-esteem might be implemented in the brain in the form of both insula-dependent awareness mechanisms and prefrontal cortex-dependent regulation mechanisms.
根据恐惧管理理论,自尊是抵御生存焦虑的缓冲器。这一命题得到了实证研究的有力支持,但其神经学基础却鲜为人知。因此,在本神经影像学研究中,我们的目的是测试在处理与死亡相关的材料时,自尊如何影响我们的神经回路激活。与先前的研究结果一致,相对于同样令人不快但与死亡无关的句子,双侧脑岛对与死亡相关的刺激反应较弱,这种效应可能反映了面对生存威胁时自我意识的下降。在脑岛前部,这种“失活”效应在高自尊个体中更为明显,这表明脑岛对于理解自尊的焦虑缓冲效应可能至关重要。此外,低自尊参与者在双侧腹外侧前额叶和内侧眶额皮质中,对与死亡相关的刺激比对不愉快刺激有更强的激活反应,这表明对这些个体来说,调节与死亡相关的想法可能更加费力。总之,这表明自尊的焦虑缓冲效应可能以脑岛依赖的意识机制和前额叶皮质依赖的调节机制的形式在大脑中实现。