| Literature DB >> 32435731 |
Christian Montag1,2, Kenneth L Davis3.
Abstract
The present work gives a short overview of central aspects of Jaak Panksepp's Affective Neuroscience Theory (AN theory) and its relevance for modern personality neuroscience. In contrast to the widely used Big Five approach to studying and understanding human personality, AN theory provides researchers with a distinct roadmap to the biological basis of personality, including molecular and neuroanatomical candidates, to understand individual differences in human behavior. Such molecular and neuroanatomical brain candidates have been derived by means of electrical brain stimulation and pharmacological challenges, while investigating primary emotional systems anchored in the subcortical mammalian brain. Research results derived from the study of emotions in mammals are also of relevance for humans because ancient layers of our minds-those layers where primary emotions originate-have been homologously conserved across species. From an evolutionary perspective, this makes sense because primal emotions represent "built-in tools for survival" for all mammals. In this context, Montag and Panksepp recently illustrated a potential ancient neurobiological effect by carving out robust associations between individual differences in primary emotions (assessed via self-report) and the Big Five in a cross-cultural study with data from the United States, Germany, and China. These associations together with some ideas derived from MacLean's Triune Brain concept highlighted (a) that primary emotions likely represent the phylogenetically oldest parts of human personality and (b) that primary emotions influence human personality in a bottom-up fashion given their localization in ancient subcortical brain regions. A comment on the work by Montag and Panksepp asked for insights on putative links between primary emotions and facets of the Big Five. Therefore, we provide some first insights into such associations from recent Germany data. In addition, the present work provides a new short version of the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales to assess individual differences in primary emotions.Entities:
Keywords: Affective Neuroscience Theory; Anxiety/fear; Big Five; Depression; Emotion; Hormones; Jaak Panksepp; Systematic review; five-factor model of personality; personality neuroscience; primary emotional systems
Year: 2018 PMID: 32435731 PMCID: PMC7219919 DOI: 10.1017/pen.2018.10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Personal Neurosci ISSN: 2513-9886
Correlation patterns between the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales and the Big Five as assessed with the 42-item Big Five short-scale
| Big Five | SEEKING | FEAR | CARE | ANGER | PLAY | SADNESS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O |
| .19* | .21** | −.19* | −.07 | .20** |
| C | .29** | .09 | .15* | .00 | .06 | −.04 |
| E | .24** | −. | .05 | .00 | . | −. |
| A | .28** | −.18** | . | −. | . | −.24** |
| N | −.21** | . | .13 | . | −. | . |
Note. Bold printed correlation patterns indicate similarities with the works by Davis, Panksepp, and Normansell (2003) and Montag and Panksepp (2017); italic printed correlation patterns could be 42-item Big Five short-scale specific.
*p<.05; **p<.01.
Means and standard deviations of the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) and 42-item Big Five short-scale measures
| Personality dimension |
| SD |
|---|---|---|
| ANPS | ||
| SEEKING | 2.81 | 0.29 |
| FEAR | 2.65 | 0.45 |
| CARE | 2.97 | 0.41 |
| ANGER | 2.55 | 0.43 |
| PLAY | 2.99 | 0.38 |
| SADNESS | 2.47 | 0.37 |
| 42-item Big Five short-scale | ||
| Extraversion | 4.34 | 0.93 |
| Neuroticism | 3.93 | 1.05 |
| Agreeableness | 5.48 | 0.72 |
| Openness to Experience | 4.61 | 0.94 |
| Conscientiousness | 5.46 | 0.80 |
Note. The range of answer options was 1–4 with respect to the ANPS and 1–7 with respect to the 42-item Big Five short-scale; 1= “strongly disagree,” and 4 respective 7= “strongly agree”.
Internal consistencies of the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) and the 42-item Big Five short-scale both on scale and subscale levels
| Personality dimension | Cronbach’s α |
|---|---|
| ANPS | |
| SEEKING | .63 |
| FEAR | .84 |
| CARE | .77 |
| ANGER | .82 |
| PLAY | .76 |
| SADNESS | .73 |
| 42-item Big Five short-scale | |
| Extraversion—complete scale (9) | .78 |
| Extraversion—assertiveness (3) | .58 |
| Extraversion—social (3) | .74 |
| Extraversion—(low) shy (3) | .70 |
| Neuroticism—complete scale (9) | .83 |
| Neuroticism—irritated (3) | .50 |
| Neuroticism—stressed (3) | .73 |
| Neuroticism—depressed (3) | .79 |
| Agreeableness—complete scale (9) | .84 |
| Agreeableness—helpful (3) | .73 |
| Agreeableness—friendly (3) | .67 |
| Agreeableness—considerate (3) | .78 |
| Openness to Experience—complete (9) | .78 |
| Openness to Experience—intellectual (3) | .61 |
| Openness to Experience—reflective (3) | .55 |
| Openness to Experience—scientific (3) | .75 |
| Conscientiousness—complete (6) | .77 |
| Conscientiousness—hard working (3) | .64 |
| Conscientiousness—organized (3) | .69 |
Note. Numbers in brackets give information on the item number of each scale.
Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales-adjective ratings (ANPS-AR) items with valence and scale
| Adjective | Valence | ANPS |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Purposeful | (+) | SEEKING |
| 2. Anxious | (+) | FEAR |
| 3. Caring | (+) | CARE |
| 4. Hot-headed | (+) | ANGER |
| 5. Funny | (+) | PLAY |
| 6. Often sad | (+) | SADNESS |
| 7. Unimaginative | (−) | SEEKING |
| 8. Nervous | (+) | FEAR |
| 9. Unsympathetic | (−) | CARE |
| 10. Aggressive | (+) | ANGER |
| 11. Not playflul | (−) | PLAY |
| 12. Socially insecure | (+) | SADNESS |
| 13. Dynamic | (+) | SEEKING |
| 14. Relaxed | (−) | FEAR |
| 15. Nurturing | (+) | CARE |
| 16. Not argumentative | (−) | ANGER |
| 17. Jokes around | (+) | PLAY |
| 18. Socially confident | (−) | SADNESS |
| 19. Curious | (+) | SEEKING |
| 20. A worrier | (+) | FEAR |
| 21. Warm | (+) | CARE |
| 22. Temperamental | (+) | ANGER |
| 23. Humorous | (+) | PLAY |
| 24. Sensitive to rejection | (+) | SADNESS |
Note. + = positive loadings; − = needs to be reversed before a score can be computed.
A new adjective-based short measure to assess individual differences in primary emotional systems (all items are answered with a 7-point Likert scaling ranging from 1= “Very Inaccurate,” 2= “Inaccurate,” 3= “Slightly Inaccurate,” 4= “Neither,” 5= “Slightly Accurate,” 6= “Accurate,” to 7= “Very Accurate”): The ANPS-adjective ratings (ANPS-AR) data reported here were collected on a U.S. student sample (total n=424, 254 females) Cronbach’s αs for the adjective-based ANPS scales ranged from .75 for PLAY to .69 for ANGER except for SEEKING at .51. The ANPS-AR can be used to collect observer ratings of other persons (e.g., therapy clients, family members, or colleagues) in addition to self-ratings. Table 9 shows the intercorrelations of the six ANPS-AR scales.
Correlation patterns between Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) SEEKING and subscales of Openness to Experience
| Openness to Experience | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| ANPS | Intellectual | Reflective | Scientific |
| SEEKING | .47** | .27** | .29** |
Note. **p<.01, two tailed.
Correlation patterns between Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) CARE, ANGER, and subscales of Agreeableness
| Agreeableness | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| ANPS | Helpful | Friendly | Considerate |
| CARE | .48** | .21** | .28** |
| ANGER | −.27** | −.42** | −.41** |
Note. **p<.01, two tailed.
Figure 1Primary emotional systems influence the Big Five/Five-Factor-Model of Personality in a bottom-up fashion. *More information on a potential SEEKING-Extraversion link is provided on page 4 (right column).
Intercorrelations of the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales-adjective ratings (ANPS-AR) dimensions, n=394
| Measure | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. AR-PLAY | – | |||||
| 2. AR-SEEKING | .35** | – | ||||
| 3. AR-CARE | .34** | .37** | – | |||
| 4. AR-FEAR | −.04 | −.06 | .05 | – | ||
| 5. AR-ANGER | −.03 | .03 | −.13 | .31** | – | |
| 6. AR-SADNESS | −.17 | −.17* | −.02 | .59** | .17* | – |
Note. *p<.05, two-tailed; **p<.01, two-tailed. p values adjusted for Bonferroni Corrections.
Correlation patterns between Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) PLAY and subscales of Extraversion
| Extraversion | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| ANPS | Assertive | Social | (Low) shy and bashful |
| PLAY | .33** | .45** | .45** |
Note. **p<.01, two tailed.
Oblique-rotated factor loadings from the 24 Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales-adjective rating (ANPS-AR) items, n=394
| Items | SADNESS | PLAY | ANGER | CARE | FEAR | SEEKING(reversed) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Socially insecure | .84 | |||||
| Socially confident | −.73 | .17 | ||||
| Sensitive to rejection | .32 | .23 | .24 | |||
| Jokes around | .81 | |||||
| Humorous | .79 | |||||
| Funny | .77 | |||||
| Hot-headed | .72 | .16 | ||||
| Aggressive | −.20 | .69 | −.17 | |||
| Temperamental | .54 | |||||
| Not argumentative | −.48 | |||||
| Warm | .69 | |||||
| Nurturing | .69 | |||||
| Caring | .67 | |||||
| Purposeful | −.20 | .16 | .40 | −.16 | −.23 | |
| Unsympathetic | .17 | −.38 | ||||
| Anxious | .80 | |||||
| A worrier | .62 | |||||
| Nervous | .20 | .58 | ||||
| Often sad | .20 | .53 | ||||
| Relaxed | −.40 | |||||
| Unimaginative | .68 | |||||
| Curious | .19 | −.42 | ||||
| Dynamic | −.28 | |||||
| Not playful | −.19 | .28 |
Correlations of Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) with ANPS-Adjective Rating (ANPS-AR), n=209
| ANPS | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ANPS-AR | PLAY | SEEKING | CARE | FEAR | ANGER | SADNESS |
| PLAY | . | .29** | .27** | .01 | .02 | .02 |
| SEEKING | .34** | . | .33** | −.07 | .04 | −.05 |
| CARE | .21 | .30** | . | .15 | −.08 | .22* |
| FEAR | −.25** | −.15 | .12 | . | .33** | .56** |
| ANGER | .01 | .05 | −.06 | .17 | . | .05 |
| SADNESS | −.33** | −.26** | .00 | .57** | .28** | . |
Note. Central correlations between same dimensions of the ANPS and ANPS-AR. Alternate versions of the same scale correlations are in boldface.
*p<.05, two-tailed; **p<.01, two-tailed. p values adjusted for Bonferroni Corrections.
Correlation patterns between Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales (ANPS) FEAR, SADNESS, ANGER, and subscales of Neuroticism
| Neuroticism | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| ANPS | Depressed | Irritated | Stressed |
| FEAR | .66** | .48** | .64** |
| SADNESS | .58** | .42** | .56** |
| ANGER | .32** | .53** | .27** |
Note. **p<.01, two tailed.
The primary emotional systems of a cross-species affective neuroscience and their underlying neuroanatomical structures and neurotransmitter/neuropeptides (information abstracted from Montag & Panksepp, 2016; Panksepp, 1998, 2005, 2011; this table is exactly taken from Montag & Panksepp, in press)
| Panksepp’s primary emotional systems | Brain neuroanatomy related to these primary emotional systems | Some key neuropeptides/neurotransmitters that arouse the primary emotional systems |
|---|---|---|
| FEAR | Central and lateral amygdala to medial hypothalamus and dorsal periaqueductal gray (PAG) | Glutamate (+), CRF (+), CCK (+), Alpha-MSH (+), Oxytocin (−) |
| RAGE/ANGER | Medial amygdala to bed nucleus of stria terminalis (BNST). Medial and perifornical hypothalamus to PAG | Substance P (+), Ach (+), Glutamate (+) |
| PANIC/SADNESS | Anterior cingulate, BNST and preoptic area, dorsomedial thalamus, PAG | Opioids (−), Oxytocin (−), Prolactin (−), CRF (+), Glutamate (+) |
| SEEKING | Nucleus accumbens—ventral tegmental area (VTA), mesolimbic and mesocortical outputs, lateral hypothalamus to PAG | Dopamine (+), Glutamate (+), Opioids (+), Neurotensin (+), Orexin (+) |
| CARE | Anterior cingulate, BNST, preoptic area, VTA, PAG | Oxytocin (+), Prolactin (+), Dopamine (+), Opioids (+/−) |
| LUST | Cortico-medial amygdala, BNST, preoptic hypothalamus, ventromedial hypothalamus, PAG | Gonadal steroids (+), Vasopressin (+ male), Oxytocin (+ female), LH-RH (+) |
| PLAY | Dorso-medial diencephalon, parafascicular area, PAG | Opioids (+/−), Glutamate (+), Ach (+), Endocannabinoids (+) |
Note. + = excitatory effects; − = inhibiting effects; CRF=corticotropin releasing hormone; CCK=cholecystokinin; alpha-MSH=alpha melanocyte stimulating hormone; Ach=acetylcholine; LH-RH=luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone.
All systems are controlled by glutamate in a facilitatory way and GABA in an inhibitory way. Moreover, the global state control systems, namely brainstem norepinephrine and serotonin systems that ascend throughout higher brain regions, tend to facilitate and inhibit, respectively, all of the primary emotional systems as well as waking/arousal and sleep/relaxation states.
LUST is not assessed with the Affective Neuroscience Personality Scales, hence potential associations with the Big Five/Five-Factor Model of Personality are not presented in Figure 1.