Emotional arousal when watching drama increases pain threshold and social bonding

Fiction, whether in the form of storytelling or plays, has a particular attraction for us: we repeatedly return to it and are willing to invest money and time in doing so. Why this is so is an evolutionary enigma that has been surprisingly underexplored. We hypothesize that emotionally arousing dram...

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Veröffentlicht in:Royal Society open science 2016-09, Vol.3 (9), p.160288-160288
Hauptverfasser: Dunbar, R. I. M., Teasdale, Ben, Thompson, Jackie, Budelmann, Felix, Duncan, Sophie, van Emde Boas, Evert, Maguire, Laurie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fiction, whether in the form of storytelling or plays, has a particular attraction for us: we repeatedly return to it and are willing to invest money and time in doing so. Why this is so is an evolutionary enigma that has been surprisingly underexplored. We hypothesize that emotionally arousing drama, in particular, triggers the same neurobiological mechanism (the endorphin system, reflected in increased pain thresholds) that underpins anthropoid primate and human social bonding. We show that, compared to subjects who watch an emotionally neutral film, subjects who watch an emotionally arousing film have increased pain thresholds and an increased sense of group bonding.
ISSN:2054-5703
2054-5703
DOI:10.1098/rsos.160288