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      Loneliness Modulates Automatic Attention to Warm and Competent Faces: Preliminary Evidence From an Eye-Tracking Study

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          Abstract

          Social connections are essential for human survival. Loneliness is a motivational factor for building and maintaining social connections. Automatic attention occurs with little cognitive effort and plays a key role in detecting biologically salient events, such as human faces. Although previous studies have investigated the effect of loneliness on social behavior, the effect of loneliness on automatic attention to human faces remains largely unknown. The present study investigated the effects of loneliness on automatic visual attention to warmth and competence facial information, which determines facial attraction. This study included 43 participants who rated warmth and competence facial information. Then, they engaged with the target-distractor paradigm in which they saw two house images at the top and bottom and indicated whether the images were identical. During the task, we presented two faces as distractors and measured visual attention toward the faces as automatic attention because participants did not have to attend to the faces. The results showed an interactive effect between subjective loneliness and facial information on automatic attention. Warm targets automatically captured the attention of people feeling relatively lonely, whereas competent targets automatically captured the attention of those who felt less lonely. These results suggest that loneliness adaptively influences automatic processing of social information.

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          Most cited references44

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          Does social exclusion motivate interpersonal reconnection? Resolving the "porcupine problem".

          Evidence from 6 experiments supports the social reconnection hypothesis, which posits that the experience of social exclusion increases the motivation to forge social bonds with new sources of potential affiliation. Threat of social exclusion led participants to express greater interest in making new friends, to increase their desire to work with others, to form more positive impressions of novel social targets, and to assign greater rewards to new interaction partners. Findings also suggest potential boundary conditions to the social reconnection hypothesis. Excluded individuals did not seem to seek reconnection with the specific perpetrators of exclusion or with novel partners with whom no face-to-face interaction was anticipated. Furthermore, fear of negative evaluation moderated responses to exclusion such that participants low in fear of negative evaluation responded to new interaction partners in an affiliative fashion, whereas participants high in fear of negative evaluation did not. 2007 APA, all rights reserved
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            Renovating the Pyramid of Needs: Contemporary Extensions Built Upon Ancient Foundations.

            Maslow's pyramid of human needs, proposed in 1943, has been one of the most cognitively contagious ideas in the behavioral sciences. Anticipating later evolutionary views of human motivation and cognition, Maslow viewed human motives as based in innate and universal predispositions. We revisit the idea of a motivational hierarchy in light of theoretical developments at the interface of evolutionary biology, anthropology, and psychology. After considering motives at three different levels of analysis, we argue that the basic foundational structure of the pyramid is worth preserving, but that it should be buttressed with a few architectural extensions. By adding a contemporary design feature, connections between fundamental motives and immediate situational threats and opportunities should be highlighted. By incorporating a classical element, these connections can be strengthened by anchoring the hierarchy of human motives more firmly in the bedrock of modern evolutionary theory. We propose a renovated hierarchy of fundamental motives that serves as both an integrative framework and a generative foundation for future empirical research.
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              Automatic and intentional brain responses during evaluation of trustworthiness of faces.

              Successful social interaction partly depends on appraisal of others from their facial appearance. A critical aspect of this appraisal relates to whether we consider others to be trustworthy. We determined the neural basis for such trustworthiness judgments using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging. Subjects viewed faces and assessed either trustworthiness or age. In a parametric factorial design, trustworthiness ratings were correlated with BOLD signal change to reveal task-independent increased activity in bilateral amygdala and right insula in response to faces judged untrustworthy. Right superior temporal sulcus (STS) showed enhanced signal change during explicit trustworthiness judgments alone. The findings extend a proposed model of social cognition by highlighting a functional dissociation between automatic engagement of amygdala versus intentional engagement of STS in social judgment.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Psychol
                Front Psychol
                Front. Psychol.
                Frontiers in Psychology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-1078
                17 January 2020
                2019
                : 10
                : 2967
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Institute of Development, Aging and Cancer, Tohoku University , Sendai, Japan
                [2] 2Japan Society for the Promotion of Science , Tokyo, Japan
                [3] 3Department of Food Management, Miyagi University , Sendai, Japan
                [4] 4Smart Ageing Research Center, Aging and Cancer, Tohoku University , Sendai, Japan
                [5] 5International Research Institute of Disaster Science, Tohoku University , Sendai, Japan
                Author notes

                Edited by: Nicholas Furl, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom

                Reviewed by: Mengsi Xu, Southwest University, China; Mila Mileva, University of York, United Kingdom

                *Correspondence: Toshiki Saito, toshiki.saito@ 123456med.tohoku.ac.jp

                This article was submitted to Personality and Social Psychology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

                Article
                10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02967
                6979038
                32010024
                fa6f3bb7-685e-4813-963a-04a852e13421
                Copyright © 2020 Saito, Motoki, Nouchi, Kawashima and Sugiura.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 17 July 2019
                : 16 December 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 2, Equations: 0, References: 60, Pages: 10, Words: 0
                Funding
                Funded by: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science 10.13039/501100001691
                Award ID: 17H06046
                Award ID: 19J12925
                Award ID: 16KT0002
                Award ID: 19H01760
                Award ID: 19H05003
                Funded by: Division for Interdisciplinary Advanced Research and Education, Tohoku University 10.13039/501100010796
                Categories
                Psychology
                Original Research

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                automatic attention,competence,loneliness,social cognition,warmth
                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                automatic attention, competence, loneliness, social cognition, warmth

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