Silent response to stress is a guy thing after all
Wednesday - Sep 29, 2010, 03:01pm (GMT+5.5)
Washington(ANI): When stressed men look at angry faces, their brains show less activity in regions responsible for understanding others' feelings-a discovery that proves silent and stoic response to stress might be a guy thing after all.
The study by USC researchers revealed that in contrast, stressed women show increased brain coordination when looking at angry faces.
"These are the first findings to indicate that sex differences in the effects of stress on social behaviour extend to one of the most basic social transactions - processing someone else's facial expression," said Mara Mather, director of the Emotion and Cognition Lab at USC.
In the study, the researchers present a series of tests indicating that, under acute stress, men had less brain response to facial expressions, in particular, fear and anger.
In both men and women, looking at pictures of faces caused activity in the part of the brain used in basic visual processing (the "fusiform face area") and in parts of the brain used for interpreting and understanding facial expressions.
However, men under acute stress showed decreased activity not only in the fusiform face area but also decreased coordination among parts of the brain that help us interpret what emotions these faces are conveying.
In a marked sex difference, women under stress showed the opposite - women under stress had increased activity in the fusiform face area and increased coordination among the regions of the brain used in interpreting facial emotions compared to the control group.
Cortisol levels, a known indication of stress, were manipulated using the cold pressor stress test, with no significant sex differences in baseline cortisol or degree of cortisol change.
Men and women under stress were as adept as those in the control group at remembering the faces.
"The study indicates that experiencing acute stress can affect subsequent activity and interactions in brain regions in opposite ways for males and females," said Mather.
"Under stress, men tend to withdraw socially while women seek emotional support," added Mather.
The study has been published in the latest issue of the journal NeuroReport.
| Other Articles: |
 |
Electronic circuits to 'rewire brain connectivity post trauma' (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Man's first step on moon: lost footage found, restored (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
31,000 on Facebook path to smooth roads in Delhi (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Future cars will alert emergency services after a crash (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
BlackBerry stock slips after PlayBook unveiling (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Indian satellite to check greenhouse gas, aerosol emissions (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Mobile application on CWG launched (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Pan-STARRS discovers first potentially hazardous asteroid (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Soon, computers to run on heat, rather than electricity (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Children with food allergies are often victims of bullying: Study (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
CT scans could detect heart disease (29th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Gut-invading worms befriend enemy T cells to trick immune system (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Baby boomers increase midlife suicide rate (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
How breast cancer drug causes arthritis in some women (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Genetic ancestry has no effect on asthma response in African Americans (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Now, futuristic car that uses body as battery (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Google 'defames French user by linking his name to rape in searches' (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Search engine statistics can predict human behaviour (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
New approach to fight HIV could spur vaccine development (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Viagra, anti-cancer drug combo shrinks tumors in vivo (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
'Gentle' skin creams could give your baby eczema (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Complexity 'allows organisms to adapt to environmental change' (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Family, culture decide whether intelligence leads to education (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Exercise 'cuts risk of fractures in elderly' (28th Sep, 2010) |
 |
Surgery effective for aggressive prostate cancer patients (28th Sep, 2010) |
|