Soothing the threatened brain: leveraging contact comfort with emotionally focused therapy

Social relationships are tightly linked to health and well-being. Recent work suggests that social relationships can even serve vital emotion regulation functions by minimizing threat-related neural activity. But relationship distress remains a significant public health problem in North America and...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-11, Vol.8 (11), p.e79314-e79314
Hauptverfasser: Johnson, Susan M, Burgess Moser, Melissa, Beckes, Lane, Smith, Andra, Dalgleish, Tracy, Halchuk, Rebecca, Hasselmo, Karen, Greenman, Paul S, Merali, Zul, Coan, James A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Social relationships are tightly linked to health and well-being. Recent work suggests that social relationships can even serve vital emotion regulation functions by minimizing threat-related neural activity. But relationship distress remains a significant public health problem in North America and elsewhere. A promising approach to helping couples both resolve relationship distress and nurture effective interpersonal functioning is Emotionally Focused Therapy for couples (EFT), a manualized, empirically supported therapy that is strongly focused on repairing adult attachment bonds. We sought to examine a neural index of social emotion regulation as a potential mediator of the effects of EFT. Specifically, we examined the effectiveness of EFT for modifying the social regulation of neural threat responding using an fMRI-based handholding procedure. Results suggest that EFT altered the brain's representation of threat cues in the presence of a romantic partner. EFT-related changes during stranger handholding were also observed, but stranger effects were dependent upon self-reported relationship quality. EFT also appeared to increase threat-related brain activity in regions associated with self-regulation during the no-handholding condition. These findings provide a critical window into the regulatory mechanisms of close relationships in general and EFT in particular.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0079314