TY - JOUR
T1 - Looking into troubled waters
T2 - Childhood emotional maltreatment modulates neural responses to prolonged gazing into one’s own, but not others’, eyes
AU - Wever, Mirjam C.M.
AU - van Houtum, Lisanne A.E.M.
AU - Janssen, Loes H.C.
AU - Wentholt, Wilma G.M.
AU - Spruit, Iris M.
AU - Tollenaar, Marieke S.
AU - Will, Geert Jan
AU - Elzinga, Bernet M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s).
PY - 2023/10/25
Y1 - 2023/10/25
N2 - One of the most prevalent nonverbal, social phenomena known to automatically elicit self- and other-referential processes is eye contact. By its negative effects on the perception of social safety and views about the self and others, childhood emotional maltreatment (CEM) may fundamentally affect these processes. To investigate whether the socioaffective consequences of CEM may become visible in response to (prolonged) eye gaze, 79 adult participants (mean [M]age = 49.87, standard deviation [SD]age = 4.62) viewed videos with direct and averted gaze of an unfamiliar other and themselves while we recorded self-reported mood, eye movements using eye-tracking, and markers of neural activity using fMRI. Participants who reported higher levels of CEM exhibited increased activity in ventromedial prefrontal cortex to one’s own, but not to others’, direct gaze. Furthermore, in contrast to those who reported fewer of such experiences, they did not report a better mood in response to a direct gaze of self and others, despite equivalent amounts of time spent looking into their own and other peoples’ eyes. The fact that CEM is associated with enhanced neural activation in a brain area that is crucially involved in self-referential processing (i.e., vmPFC) in response to one’s own direct gaze is in line with the chronic negative impact of CEM on a person’s self-views. Interventions that directly focus on targeting maladaptive self-views elicited during eye gaze to self may be clinically useful.
AB - One of the most prevalent nonverbal, social phenomena known to automatically elicit self- and other-referential processes is eye contact. By its negative effects on the perception of social safety and views about the self and others, childhood emotional maltreatment (CEM) may fundamentally affect these processes. To investigate whether the socioaffective consequences of CEM may become visible in response to (prolonged) eye gaze, 79 adult participants (mean [M]age = 49.87, standard deviation [SD]age = 4.62) viewed videos with direct and averted gaze of an unfamiliar other and themselves while we recorded self-reported mood, eye movements using eye-tracking, and markers of neural activity using fMRI. Participants who reported higher levels of CEM exhibited increased activity in ventromedial prefrontal cortex to one’s own, but not to others’, direct gaze. Furthermore, in contrast to those who reported fewer of such experiences, they did not report a better mood in response to a direct gaze of self and others, despite equivalent amounts of time spent looking into their own and other peoples’ eyes. The fact that CEM is associated with enhanced neural activation in a brain area that is crucially involved in self-referential processing (i.e., vmPFC) in response to one’s own direct gaze is in line with the chronic negative impact of CEM on a person’s self-views. Interventions that directly focus on targeting maladaptive self-views elicited during eye gaze to self may be clinically useful.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85174803060&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3758/s13415-023-01135-y
DO - 10.3758/s13415-023-01135-y
M3 - Article
C2 - 37880569
AN - SCOPUS:85174803060
SN - 1530-7026
VL - 23
SP - 1598
EP - 1609
JO - Cognitive, Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience
JF - Cognitive, Affective and Behavioral Neuroscience
IS - 6
ER -