Yielding to social presence as a bioenergetic strategy: Preliminary evidence using fMRI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cresp.2021.100010Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • According to Social Baseline Theory, the human niche is other humans.

  • In support, humans show lower neural response to threat when with a partner

  • Yielding to others also relates to lower neural response during a subsequent challenge.

  • And yielding relates to lower use of self-regulation for coping with stress.

  • Conserving energy through yielding may be a mechanism of social support to better health link.

Abstract

All life must strategically conserve and allocate resources in order to meet the challenges of living. Social Baseline Theory suggests that, for humans, social context and the social resources therein are a central ecology in human phylogeny. In ontogeny, this manifests in flexible bioenergetic strategies that vary in the population based on social history. We introduce yielding, a conservation process wherein we relax physiological investment in response to a challenge when in the presence of a relational partner. The availability of these conserved resources then impact response to subsequent challenges while alone and if this pattern is habitual, it can reciprocally influence strategies used to solve or cope with typical stress. We discuss neural targets of this resource conservation and reframe our lab's previous studies on the social regulation of neural threat responding within this framework. We then show functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data indicating the presence of relational partners decreases blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) response to threat in key targets of resource conservation (e.g., dlPFC, dACC, and insula) and that stronger signal reduction in these areas coincide with less BOLD in pre-frontal (dlPFC. vmPFC) and visuo-sensory integration (occipital cortex, precuneus, superior parietal lobule) regions during ostracism. Finally, we show that these neural relationships are associated with less use of self-regulation-based coping strategies two years post scanning. Taken together, we show the utility of yielding both as a concept and as a bioenergetic process which helps to conserve energy in this social primate.

Keywords

Social regulation
Emotion regulation
Coping
Social baseline theory
Social neuroscience
fMRI

Cited by (0)