Litcius/Paper detail

The mere physical presence of another person reduces human autonomic responses to aversive sounds

Yanyan Qi, Martin J. Herrmann, Luisa Bell, Anna Fackler, Shihui Han, Jürgen Deckert, Grit Hein

2020Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Social animals show reduced physiological responses to aversive events if a conspecific is physically present. Although humans are innately social, it is unclear whether the mere physical presence of another person is sufficient to reduce human autonomic responses to aversive events. In our study, participants experienced aversive and neutral sounds alone (alone treatment) or with an unknown person that was physically present without providing active support. The present person was a member of the participants' ethnical group (ingroup treatment) or a different ethnical group (outgroup treatment), inspired by studies that have found an impact of similarity on social modulation effects. We measured skin conductance responses (SCRs) and collected subjective similarity and affect ratings. The mere presence of an ingroup or outgroup person significantly reduced SCRs to the aversive sounds compared with the alone condition, in particular in participants with high situational anxiety. Moreover, the effect was stronger if participants perceived the ingroup or outgroup person as dissimilar to themselves. Our results indicate that the mere presence of another person was sufficient to diminish autonomic responses to aversive events in humans, and thus verify the translational validity of basic social modulation effects across different species.

Topics & Concepts

Ingroups and outgroupsPsychologyOutgroupAversive StimulusSituational ethicsSimilarity (geometry)AnxietySocial psychologyAffect (linguistics)Social anxietyDevelopmental psychologyCommunicationArtificial intelligenceComputer sciencePsychiatryImage (mathematics)Psychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentEvolutionary Psychology and Human BehaviorBehavioral Health and Interventions