Physiological and behavioral reactivity to social exclusion: a functional infrared thermal imaging study in patients with psoriasis

Author:

Ponsi Giorgia12ORCID,Monachesi Bianca1ORCID,Panasiti Vincenzo3,Aglioti Salvatore Maria12ORCID,Panasiti Maria Serena12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy

2. IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation, Rome, Italy

3. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Unit, Campus Bio-Medico University of Rome, Rome, Italy

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity can be heavily impacted not only by basic threats to survival but also by threats to social bonds. In this study we explored the behavioral and physiological consequences of social exclusion/inclusion in patients with psoriasis, a disease frequently associated with the experience of being ostracized and with deficient emotion regulation skills. We employed a virtual ball-tossing game (Cyberball) to induce the experience of social exclusion/inclusion. We then used a Trust Game to measure the effects of this social modulation on trust. During Cyberball, infrared thermal imaging was used to record participants’ facial temperature and thus obtain an online measure of SNS activation. Behavioral data showed that social exclusion shifted participants’ trust toward unfamiliar players who had not previously excluded them. Physiological data indicated that in control participants, social exclusion triggered higher SNS activation than inclusion. No such effect was found in patients with psoriasis, whose SNS activity was the same during inclusion as it was during exclusion, suggesting that they benefit less from inclusive experiences than control participants. In addition, in patients but not in controls, higher SNS activation during social exclusion was linked to higher monetary investment toward unfamiliar players, a result in keeping with the social reconnection hypothesis, according to which emotions triggered by social rejection can be regulated by investing in new social interactions. We also found that an increase in periorbital temperature is accompanied by a decrease in happiness ratings after social exclusion was experienced during the Cyberball game. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Previous research on emotional processes in psoriasis has mainly employed self-report measures. In this study we used thermal imaging to obtain an online measure of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activity during social exclusion and tested how this experience influenced subsequent trust. We found that being included was a less positive experience for patients compared with controls and that SNS activity during exclusion had a stronger influence on subsequent trust in patients than in controls.

Funder

PRIN Grant

ERC Advanced Grant eHONESTY

Sapienza University Grant

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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