Social high performers under stress behave more prosocially and detect happy emotions better in a male sample

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Social high performers under stress behave more prosocially and detect happy emotions better in a male sample. / Schiller, Bastian; Brustkern, Johanna; von Dawans, Bernadette; Habermann, Marie; Pacurar, Marti; Heinrichs, Markus.

In: PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINO, Vol. 156, 106338, 10.2023, p. 106338.

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@article{0e105ecc16244a11a9c87b453e5f1939,
title = "Social high performers under stress behave more prosocially and detect happy emotions better in a male sample",
abstract = "Psychosocial stress is increasing in society, impacting our lives in all social domains. However, the conditions under which stress facilitates (“tend-and-befriend”) or hinders (“fight-or-flight”) social approach remain elusive. We tested whether previous heterogeneous findings might be resolved by accounting for individual differences in social performance under stress. For that purpose, we introduce the novel Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) social performance index that was aggregated across ratings from two independent observers. Moreover, we apply an innovative setup enabling electroencephalographic (EEG) data to be measured inside an electrically-shielded cabin during stress, namely the TSST-EEG. Relying on a sample of 59 healthy male participants, we collected behavioral (i.e., sharing resources with others) and cognitive (i.e., detecting facial emotional expressions) approach patterns while participants experienced either acute psychosocial stress (n = 31) or no stress (control condition; n = 28) and while EEG was being recorded. During stress exposure, high-performing participants behaved more prosocially, and differentiated better between happy and neutral emotions on both behavioral and neurophysiological levels (revealed by intensity differences in a N170-like response). Overall, our findings demonstrate the added value of both the novel TSST social performance index and the novel TSST-EEG setup. By showing that high social performance during the TSST is associated with behavioral, cognitive, and neurophysiological approach patterns, our study offers valuable insights into adaptive or maladaptive psychobiological mechanisms in coping with psychosocial stress. Future stress research should address the role of social performance differences during stress in social interaction to better understand the behavioral consequences of psychosocial stress in humans.",
author = "Bastian Schiller and Johanna Brustkern and {von Dawans}, Bernadette and Marie Habermann and Marti Pacurar and Markus Heinrichs",
year = "2023",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1016/j.psyneuen.2023.106338",
language = "English",
volume = "156",
pages = "106338",
journal = "PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINO",
issn = "0306-4530",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social high performers under stress behave more prosocially and detect happy emotions better in a male sample

AU - Schiller, Bastian

AU - Brustkern, Johanna

AU - von Dawans, Bernadette

AU - Habermann, Marie

AU - Pacurar, Marti

AU - Heinrichs, Markus

PY - 2023/10

Y1 - 2023/10

N2 - Psychosocial stress is increasing in society, impacting our lives in all social domains. However, the conditions under which stress facilitates (“tend-and-befriend”) or hinders (“fight-or-flight”) social approach remain elusive. We tested whether previous heterogeneous findings might be resolved by accounting for individual differences in social performance under stress. For that purpose, we introduce the novel Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) social performance index that was aggregated across ratings from two independent observers. Moreover, we apply an innovative setup enabling electroencephalographic (EEG) data to be measured inside an electrically-shielded cabin during stress, namely the TSST-EEG. Relying on a sample of 59 healthy male participants, we collected behavioral (i.e., sharing resources with others) and cognitive (i.e., detecting facial emotional expressions) approach patterns while participants experienced either acute psychosocial stress (n = 31) or no stress (control condition; n = 28) and while EEG was being recorded. During stress exposure, high-performing participants behaved more prosocially, and differentiated better between happy and neutral emotions on both behavioral and neurophysiological levels (revealed by intensity differences in a N170-like response). Overall, our findings demonstrate the added value of both the novel TSST social performance index and the novel TSST-EEG setup. By showing that high social performance during the TSST is associated with behavioral, cognitive, and neurophysiological approach patterns, our study offers valuable insights into adaptive or maladaptive psychobiological mechanisms in coping with psychosocial stress. Future stress research should address the role of social performance differences during stress in social interaction to better understand the behavioral consequences of psychosocial stress in humans.

AB - Psychosocial stress is increasing in society, impacting our lives in all social domains. However, the conditions under which stress facilitates (“tend-and-befriend”) or hinders (“fight-or-flight”) social approach remain elusive. We tested whether previous heterogeneous findings might be resolved by accounting for individual differences in social performance under stress. For that purpose, we introduce the novel Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) social performance index that was aggregated across ratings from two independent observers. Moreover, we apply an innovative setup enabling electroencephalographic (EEG) data to be measured inside an electrically-shielded cabin during stress, namely the TSST-EEG. Relying on a sample of 59 healthy male participants, we collected behavioral (i.e., sharing resources with others) and cognitive (i.e., detecting facial emotional expressions) approach patterns while participants experienced either acute psychosocial stress (n = 31) or no stress (control condition; n = 28) and while EEG was being recorded. During stress exposure, high-performing participants behaved more prosocially, and differentiated better between happy and neutral emotions on both behavioral and neurophysiological levels (revealed by intensity differences in a N170-like response). Overall, our findings demonstrate the added value of both the novel TSST social performance index and the novel TSST-EEG setup. By showing that high social performance during the TSST is associated with behavioral, cognitive, and neurophysiological approach patterns, our study offers valuable insights into adaptive or maladaptive psychobiological mechanisms in coping with psychosocial stress. Future stress research should address the role of social performance differences during stress in social interaction to better understand the behavioral consequences of psychosocial stress in humans.

U2 - 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2023.106338

DO - 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2023.106338

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 37499422

VL - 156

SP - 106338

JO - PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINO

JF - PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINO

SN - 0306-4530

M1 - 106338

ER -