The Social Dimension of Stress Reactivity

Author:

von Dawans Bernadette1,Fischbacher Urs23,Kirschbaum Clemens4,Fehr Ernst5,Heinrichs Markus16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Laboratory for Biological and Personality Psychology, University of Freiburg

2. Department of Economics, University of Konstanz

3. Thurgau Institute of Economics, Kreuzlingen, Switzerland

4. Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, Technical University of Dresden

5. Institute for Empirical Research in Economics, University of Zurich

6. Freiburg Brain Imaging Center, University Medical Center, University of Freiburg

Abstract

Psychosocial stress precipitates a wide spectrum of diseases with major public-health significance. The fight-or-flight response is generally regarded as the prototypic human stress response, both physiologically and behaviorally. Given that having positive social interactions before being exposed to acute stress plays a preeminent role in helping individuals control their stress response, engaging in prosocial behavior in response to stress (tend-and-befriend) might also be a protective pattern. Little is known, however, about the immediate social responses following stress in humans. Here we show that participants who experienced acute social stress, induced by a standardized laboratory stressor, engaged in substantially more prosocial behavior (trust, trustworthiness, and sharing) compared with participants in a control condition, who did not experience socioevaluative threat. These effects were highly specific: Stress did not affect the readiness to exhibit antisocial behavior or to bear nonsocial risks. These results show that stress triggers social approach behavior, which operates as a potent stress-buffering strategy in humans, thereby providing evidence for the tend-and-befriend hypothesis.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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