US Army Research Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21005, USA.
Annenberg School of Communication, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci. 2020 Oct 8;15(8):827-837. doi: 10.1093/scan/nsaa109.
The social environment an individual is embedded in influences their ability and motivation to engage self-control processes, but little is known about the neural mechanisms underlying this effect. Many individuals successfully regulate their behavior even when they do not show strong activation in canonical self-control brain regions. Thus, individuals may rely on other resources to compensate, including daily experiences navigating and managing complex social relationships that likely bolster self-control processes. Here, we employed a network neuroscience approach to investigate the role of social context and social brain systems in facilitating self-control in adolescents. We measured brain activation using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as 62 adolescents completed a Go/No-Go response inhibition task. We found that self-referential brain systems compensate for weaker activation in executive function brain systems, especially for adolescents with more friends and more communities in their social networks. Collectively, our results indicate a critical role for self-referential brain systems during the developmental trajectory of self-control throughout adolescence.
个体所处的社会环境会影响其参与自我控制过程的能力和动机,但人们对此影响的神经机制知之甚少。许多人即使在经典的自我控制大脑区域没有表现出强烈的激活,也能成功地调节自己的行为。因此,个体可能依赖其他资源来进行补偿,包括日常生活中的经验,如应对和管理复杂的社会关系,这可能会增强自我控制过程。在这里,我们采用网络神经科学的方法来研究社会环境和社会大脑系统在促进青少年自我控制中的作用。我们使用功能磁共振成像 (fMRI) 测量了 62 名青少年在完成 Go/No-Go 反应抑制任务时的大脑激活情况。我们发现,自我参照大脑系统可以弥补执行功能大脑系统较弱的激活,尤其是对于那些在社交网络中有更多朋友和更多社区的青少年。总的来说,我们的结果表明,自我参照大脑系统在青少年自我控制的发展轨迹中起着关键作用。