Literature DB >> 33759708

Aggression differentially modulates neural correlates of social intention attribution to benevolent, tickling and taunting laughter: An fMRI study in children and adolescents.

A Martinelli1, B Kreifelts2, D Wildgruber2, A Bernhard1, K Ackermann1, C M Freitag1, C Schwenck1,3.   

Abstract

Human laughter is a powerful means of communicating social intention, ranging from welcoming and friendly to hostile and ridiculing. To be communicated accurately, the recipient must correctly identify the laugher's underlying social intention. Regular misattribution of the social intention of others has been associated with maladaptive psychosocial development, in particular with aggressive behavior. We investigated the relationship between self-reported aggressive behavior and the neural correlates of social intention attributions to different audiovisual laughter types in 50 healthy children and adolescents (29 female, 10-18 years, M 15.5, SD 2.2) using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Trial-by-trial associations of neural response and behavioral attributions were distinctly modulated by aggression for benevolent versus taunting and tickling laughter. With increasing aggression, hostile misattributions of benevolent laughter were associated with decreased dorsolateral prefrontal and anterior insular cortex activation. In contrast, hostile attributions of taunting and tickling laughter were associated with increased superior frontal, superior temporal, medial prefrontal, supplementary motor, and anterior and mid-cingulate cortex activation. We argue that aggression may be associated with down-regulated emotional saliency of benevolent laughter, whereas up-regulated neural responses to taunting laughter may underlie a heightened sensitivity to hostility or acceptance of taunting behavior in more aggressive individuals.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Social intention; aggression; hostile attribution; laughter perception; social saliency network

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33759708     DOI: 10.1080/17470919.2021.1908420

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Neurosci        ISSN: 1747-0919            Impact factor:   2.083


  1 in total

1.  Toward reanimating the laughter-involved large-scale brain networks to alleviate affective symptoms.

Authors:  Shahab A Zarei; Seyedeh-Saeedeh Yahyavi; Iman Salehi; Milad Kazemiha; Ali-Mohammad Kamali; Mohammad Nami
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2022-06-10       Impact factor: 3.405

  1 in total

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