Toward a neurology of loneliness.
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Abstract
Social isolation has been recognized as a major risk factor for morbidity and mortality in humans for more than a quarter century. The brain is the key organ of social connections and processes, however, and the same objective social relationship can be experienced as caring and protective or as exploitive and isolating. We review evidence that the perception of social isolation (i.e., loneliness) impacts brain and behavior and is a risk factor for broad-based morbidity and mortality. However, the causal role of loneliness on neural mechanisms and mortality is difficult to test conclusively in humans. Mechanistic animal studies provide a lens through which to evaluate the neurological effects of a member of a…
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
Keywords
- Loneliness
- Social isolation
- Psychology
- Social animal
- Social neuroscience
- Developmental psychology
- Isolation (microbiology)
- Social cognition
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